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MR. GAY'S FABLES, WITH BEWICK'S WOODCUTS (3rd S. xii. 461.)—I have not the least doubt that the wood-cuts in the small volume of Gay's Fables, printed in 1806, are by Bewick, having been familiar with them at that date, when we used to read Gay's Fables as a school-book. The wood-blocks have, moreover, been wonderfully preserved, and done service in various editions, even so recently as 1834. For I have a small copy printed in that year for Longman and Co., and from early recollections I am sure of the identity of each one of the wood-cuts. I have also an edition of that favourite old book, The Looking-glass of the Mind, taken from Berquin's Ami des Enfans, which has also the original wood-cuts by Bewick. The engravings in both these works are very valuable, not only for their originality and spirited, though rude, execution, but for their exhibiting accurate delineations of the dress and habits of the latter part of the last century.

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and the words "sola fatetur " are probably those wanting to complete the first line of the inscription. The second line requires such a word as "perit," "death is swallowed up in piety," or perhaps "minor; as, however small our mortal bodies may be, yet death, though subject to none, is yet overcome by, and so becomes less than piety. The writer having quoted one classical author, may have had in his mind another, and the "Victor jacet pietas" of Ovid (M. i. 149), would supply an ending to the epitaph in the word jacet." Adopting Gifford's version of the passage from Juvenal, the whole may be paraphrased

thus:

"Death, the great teacher, Death alone proclaims
The true dimensions of our puny frames;
Yet death, that now obedience yields to none,
His conqueror in piety shall own," &c.

W. E. BUCKLEY.

THE NAME OF SHEFFIELD (3rd S. ix. 409.) I think W., the friend of your correspondent H. J., is likely to be correct in his assumption hat the name of Sheffield is a corruption of the Danish "Skjev-Fjeld," signifying a "sloping hill or mountain." At Leeds, just on the outskirt of he town, there is, leading down from the locality of Woodhouse to Woodhouse Carr, a piece of round which has been known as "Shay Field," for "time out of mind," as the saying runs. There re buildings there now, which may have given nother name to the place, but they are only of ecent erection, and "Shay Field" is in everypody's mouth yet thereabouts. The field was a

very long one, was an easy even slope from top to bottom, and was, in short, a smooth hill-side, needing more breath to get up than old people could well spare. The peculiar character of the ground is continued on both sides, and will be above a quarter of a mile in extent, forming a high knoll at one and another point, for a good deal of it remains grass land. Shay Field" was the only enclosure about that was not strictly private property, as the congregation of pig-sties at the bottom sufficiently evidenced; hence the limited application of the local name. C. C. R.

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PRAYING FOR HUSBANDS (3rd S. viii. 205.) At least the tradition of this as an old custom may be inferred from the talk in some of the villages of North Yorkshire. The servant-girls will tell you how that once one of their number stipulated with a bargaining mistress at a statutehiring, that she should be allowed ten minutes every day at noon to go pray for a husband in. "Mrs. S-, who had lived as housekeeper with a The following story is current in one quarter :Catholic family near York (names and places being specified) for many years, had engaged one servant who became an object of curiosity to the rest of the maids; for as regularly as noon came, she would leave off work and go to her chamber. By-and-by it was whispered about that their fellow-servant spent the time in praying for a husband. One day one of the men hid himself in a closet adjoining the devotee's room, and waited her arrival. At the usual time she came, and kneeling before her little framed picture of the Virgin and Child, began, and continued for a length of time: A husband! a husband! sweet Mary, a husband! Send him soon, an' he may be owt but a tailor'-ought but a tailor. Nowt [nothing] but a tailor!" the man at last shouted. She responded at once: 'Ho'd thee noise, little Jesus, an' let thee mother speak.' 'Nowt but a tailor!' as sharply replied the man again. owt but a tailor, owt but a tailor, but a tailor rather than nowt, good Lord."" I beg to share responsibility here with somebody-I don't care who.

Nay,

C. C. R.

JEAN ETIENNE LIOTARD (3rd S. ix. 473.)—In reply to J.'s query, I cannot say "whether Liotard painted life-size portraits in oil while in England"; but I saw in his family in Amsterdam, a few years ago, a large room hung round with a considerable number of life-size crayons (pastel) by him, which were full of life: one amongst others in a Turkish costume-a portrait of himself.

P. A. L.

DORKING, SURREY (3rd S. xii. 461.) I have the second edition of this work, published_1823, by John Timbs. D. D. H.

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"Candlemas day being Monday. Bee it remembered that his Maty was seis'd with a most violent fit of apoplexy, wch terminated in an intermittent fever, of wch hee dyed about 12 the ffriday following, being ffeb. 6th " J. WILKINS, B.C.L. JOHN DE CRITZ (3rd S. ix. 470.)—I can find nothing in Flemish biographies or others (excepting Horace Walpole's (G. Vertue's) Anecdotes of Painting) about the said John de Critz, who seems, at all events, to have been very well off in the world, as we see he could bear without flinching a royal debt of 2,1581. 13s., "having been due vnto him a long tyme since in his Mate greate wardrobe." P. A. L. COUTHLY (3rd S. x. 129.)-" Couth," in South Yorkshire, is used in the sense of keen. "He's couth eniff at a bargain," is a phrase sometimes heard. C. C. R.

of those who have passed away from among us, showing
the dates of their births and deaths, and a reference to
the preceding editions in which their respective memoin
are to be found. Both these add to the utility of this
most useful book.

The Bible by Coverdale, MDXXXV. Remarks on the
Titles; the Year of Publication; the Preliminary; the
Water-Marks, &c., with Fac-similes, by Francis Fry
F.S.A. (Willis & Sotheran.)

Mr. Fry, who has devoted so much time and research to the history of the earliest English versions of the Scrip tures, here presents to Bibliographers a small volume on the subject of Coverdale's Translation of the Bible, the date of its composition and publication, peculiarities of title-pages, variations in the Dedication, and other mi nutia connected with the Edition, which, illustrated as they are by fac-similes, make it a very interesting little book.

The Mad Folk of Shakespeare. Psychological Essays by John Charles Bucknill, M.D., F.R.S. Second Edition, revised. (Macmillan.)

Eight years ago we bore testimony to the interest of these Essays, in which Mr. Bucknill brings his experience as a professional man, to bear upon Shakespeare's knowledge of abnormal states of mind; and we are glad to see our judgment confirmed by such a recognition of the value of the writer's labours as is shown by the call for a second revised edition of them.

The Boy's Own Book: a Complete Encyclopædia of Sport and Pastimes, Athletic, Scientific, and Recreatio (Lockwood & Co.)

Between 600 and 700 pages devoted to In-door and Out-door Sports, Illustrations of Natural History, Scien tific Recreations, Games of Skill, and Parlour Conjuring profusely illustrated with well-executed woodcuts, mak up a book which any boy will be well pleased to call his

PELL-MELL (3rd S. xii. 483.)—Your learned correspondent A. A. has indeed unearthed a curiosity. Clearly the 'prentice-box, or Christmasbox, was so called from piller and malle, spoil-box or polling-box, to contain the spoil or black mail levied by them. Mail means rent or tribute, and is mal in Saxon. It also means a spot, macula, mole, but the round tribute could hardly designate a halfpenny. Can Minsheu possibly mean that it is a box that "the prentices buy to put money [2. e. a halfpenny] into," &c., "à Gal. piller, i. e. pill or polle, and maille"? The words may be only out of order. Was a halfpenny the 'prentice gentlemen by whom it is required, whose names and address are given toll levied ? Can any archeologist tell?

C. A. W. The French expression describing poverty, of "ni sou ni maille," will help to answer the latter LYDIARD. part of A. A.'s query.

Miscellaneous.

NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC.

Men of the Time: A Dictionary of Contemporaries, con-
taining Notices of Eminent Characters of both Sexes.
Seventh Edition, revised and brought down to the present
Time. (Routledge.)

That a work of such obvious popular interest should reach a seventh edition, and in due time a seventeenth and a seventieth, may well be expected-more especially since every fresh editor seems to vie with his predecessors in giving it completeness. Mr. G. H. Townsend, to whom the present edition has been entrusted, has introduced into it two entirely new features calculated to enhance its value as a work of general reference. The first is a Key to Assumed Names, which is capable of being yet further extended; and the second, a Biographical Index

own.

BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES
WANTED TO PURCHASE.

Particulars of price, &c., of the following Book to be sent direct to the for that purpose:

THE BRITISH POETS. 70 Vols., by Thos. Park, F.S.A. Published by
Sharpe, 1815. The vol. containing Milton's" Paradise Lost."
Wanted by Mr. E. Walford, 27, Bouverie Street, E.C.

THE ENGLISH BIBLE. Part 1. Genesis. 4to, sewed, 1853.
Wanted by Mr. Robert B. Blackader, 36, Trinity Square, Southwark.

Notices to Correspondents.

OOR NEW YEAR'S NOMBER, which will be the First of a New Seris (the Fourth) of Notes and Queries, will be a double number, consisting ( forty-eight pages, and in addition to the first part of

THE UNIVERSAL ART CATALOGUE

will contain, among many other interesting papers.

Caricatures of James Ward of Ipswich, by Mr. Bruce.
Churchyard and Fortunatus, by Mr J. Payne Collier,

George Turberville a New Year's Gift, by Mr. Bolton Corney.
Anthony Munday's Maiden of Confolens. by Dr. Rimbault,
Lambeth Library and its Librarians, by Mr. William J. Thoms,
Ancient Drinking Glass.

The Author of "The Cherrie and the Slae."
Inedited Letter of Oliver Cromwell.
Mason's Portrait of Gray, &c. &c.

OUR TRIND SERIES being now completed, gentlemen who deart make up their sets are recommended to make early application for numbers they may require for that purpose, as the numbers on hand shortly be made up into volumes.

LECTOR. The prayer attributed to Prince Eugene, but composed Pope Clement X., is printed in N. & Q"-the English version in 8. v. 491, and the original Latin in vi. 50.

ERRATUM.-3rd 8. xi. p. 220, col. il. line 5 from bottom for "1 read" 10."

"NOTES & QUzaızs" is rogistered for transmission abroad.

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[For classified articles, see ANONYMOUS WORKS, BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED, EPITAPHS, FOLK LORE, PROVERBS
AND PHRASES, QUOTATIONS, SHAKSPERIANA, AND SONGS AND BALLADS.]

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Ussher family pedigree, 92

Walsh (Edward), M.D., biography, 415

Wolfe (Arthur), Lord Viscount Kilwarden, 86
Abjuration, an ancient form of, 225, 272

Abyssinia and its people, 300, 452; its royal arms
460; an heir to the throne of, 411, 443
Abyssinia, the district of Habesh, 186
Abyssinian tradition of a Theodore, 263
Ache, or ake, pronunciation, 491
Achende on brush, or pencil, 419
China, broken, 448

Stalactites and stalagmites, 344
Adamas on anonymous arms, 45

Stains in old deeds, &c., 47
Addington, Kent, its Druidic circle, 287
A. (Dir. S.), on dates upon old seals, 297
Harold's coat armour, 271

Addis (John), jun., on beauty unfortunate, 18, 114
Browning (Robert), "Boy and Angel," 6
Butterfly, as used by the poets, 119

Cap-à-pie, 136

Circular, curious uses of the word, 167

Conspicuous from its absence," 119

Corsie, its meaning, 390

Dole, its different meanings, 117

Othergates, 140

Percy's fol. MS., ed. Furnivall, 376

Proverbs explained, 487

"Rose of dawn," 88

Sield happy, 305

Taylor (Bishop Jeremy), works, 404

Tomb at Barbadoes, 58

"Troilus and Cressida," 122

"When Adam delved," &c., 73

Wolwarde, its meaning, 524

A. (E. H.) on a curious effect of lightning, 224

Dolomite mountains, 310

Evening mass, 29.7
Gore grouse, 390

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A. (E. H.), on Parish registers, their destruction, 500
Posselius (Joan.), Apothegmata," 523

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Pugin (A. W.), on the English schism, 484
Smithsonian Institution, 228

Solomon (Job Ben), 336

Elius Donatus, grammarian at Rome, 49
Aggas's Map of London, 1560, 504

Agnus Dei found on the "Guillaume Tell," 6

A. (H. R.), on Beagle, a small dog, 199
Dictionary of customs, 234

Novel views of creation, 374

Pot, its different meanings, 275

Ainger (Alfred), on " Deaf as a beetle," 398

Pronunciation of names, 361

A. (J.), Peckham, on Nuremberg prison tower, 523

Sheridan (R. B.), 434

Alan the Steward, 129, 257

Alexandrine verses, 281

Alexis of Piemont, "The Secretes," ed. 1614, 389,

533

Alfred (King), marriage with Alswitha, 45

Alhama, the conquest of, 391

Alken (Henry), artist, 155

All-to as a separate word, 372, 464, 535

Almack's, origin of the name, 139, 179

Alpha on "The Constant Lover's Garland," 285
Alphabet, one for Europe, 17

Alphabets, primitive, 497

Alton, its discreditable fame, 373, 468, 513
Amberley (Lord), his travelling name, 263

America: centre of the United States, 186; its first

chartered town, 411; its three oldest towns, 147,
212

American episcopate, 284, 491

American navigation laws, 284

American Notes and Queries, 501, 531
Ampoule (Ste.), the Holy Vial, 149, 213
Ancestry, the pride of, 343

Andrewes (Bishop Lancelot), bequests, 393
Angelo (Michael), "Last Judgment," 15
Angelus bells, 18, 35

Angling, poem on, by Joseph Heely, 410

Anonymous Works:-

High Life below Stairs, 107

History of the Desertion, 435

Letters from an Armenian in Ireland, 225, 295,

531

Lex Talionis, 329, 404
L'Homme on Latin, 247

Modest Apology, 225

Liturgy on Universal Principles, 332

Liturgy of the Church of England, 1763, 366

Manuscrit venu de Ste. Hélène, 54, 276

Mephistopheles in England, 265

Memoirs of the Life of Parnese, 445

Our Zion, or Presbyterian Popery, 98

Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of the Eng-
lish Language, 24

Right of Tythes Asserted, 426

School of Patience, 309, 399, 463

Shakspeare and his Friends, 27

Sketches of Young Gentlemen, 130, 219

Sketches of Young Ladies, 130, 219

Songe d'un Anglais, 150

Summer Rambles, Studies, &c., 244

Vision, or the Romish Interpretation, 150
Youth of Shakspeare, 27

Anserine wisdom, 478

Antwerp Cathedral described, 328, 447
Aphorisms and proverbial sayings, 148, 338
Apocryphal Gospels, translated, 160
Apron, wearing a leather, a saying, 208
Archæologist's Handbook, 80

Archer (Rev. John), nonconformist, 109, 198
Archer (Sir Simon), birth and death, 205
Archimedes on two-faced pictures, 58

Archipelago, its derivation, 118

Arms, so-called grants of, 15, 259; augmentation of,
262

Arras, portraits in its public library, 455

Art Catalogue, 493, 517

"Articles to be followed and observed," 1549, 6

Ashley (Sir Anthony), first cultivator of cabbages, 287,

533

Anglo-Scotus on the birth-place of Cromwell's mother, Assembly room rules, 477

383

Colbert, bishop of Rodèz, 397

Fisher family, co. Roxburgh, 292

Gib baronetcy, 274, 536

Hamilton (James), of Bothwellhaugh, 12
Home (Earl of), 231

Mercer (Sir Andrew), 252

Oath of the peacock, 275

Angus (G.), printer at Newcastle, 446
Animals, language for, 501

Anonymous Works:-

Albumazar, a comedy, 135, 155, 510
Botanical Ladder, 244

Caroline, "The Queen's Case Stated," 460
Chessboard of Life, by Quis, 7
Church Pageantry Displayed, 208
Cromwell (Oliver), "Life," 320

Dorking, a Picturesque Promenade round, 461,

537

George IV., "The King's Treatment of the Queen,"

460

Great Question on Things Indifferent, 208

Asses in England, 373
Asterisms, works with, 372
Aston (Col. Henry Hervey), 220
A. (T. C.) on the bayonet, 365
Hakewell, (Wm.), MSS., 331
Flashing signal lamps, 363

Athor on Princes of Reuss, 305
Atkinson (J. C.) on brock, an insect, 360
Gabble Ratchet, or Retches, 328

Atone, or attone, its orthography, 337

Attainders of 1715 and 1745, 522

Aubrey (John), "Miscellanies" annotated, 306
Aubrey (W. H. S.) on Index to periodicals, 350
Law of evidence, work on the, 351

Australia, its gold, 522
Australian bomerang, 400
Author's favourite works, 523
Autographs in bocks, 126, 166
Auxiliaries, Georgian, 430

Avery (Richard), ejected minister, 413
A. (W. E. A.) on Aubrey's "Miscellanies," 306
Piozzi (Mrs.), three warnings, 482
"School of Patience," 309

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Bannister (John) on St. Michael's Mount, 51

Baptising boys before girls, 184, 293, 403, 469

Baptism by immersion, 66, 152, 238, 253; in warm
water, 412

Barbadoes, the tomb at, 9, 58, 97, 257

Barge, the London Lord Mayor's, 326

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Barham (R. H.), "Dick's Long-tailed Coat," 57; in- | Bell-ropes, hanging in the, 91

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Tomb at Barbadoes, 257

Baugé, the battle of, 16, 53, 118, 159, 468
Bayonet, its history, 287, 364, 398

B. (C. C.) on "Sawney's Mistake," a poem, 149

B. (C. T.) on anonymous works, 130

D'Israeli's epigram on Alison, 447
"Frightened Isaac," 130
Geography of 1654, 463
Mottoes of orders, 295
Tennysoniana, 283

B. (C. W.) on sermons in stone, 169
Beauchamp (Thomas de), his seal, 382
Beagle, a small dog, 113, 199, 299

Beaugé, the battle of, 16, 53, 118, 159, 468

Bells at St. Andrews, 14; Angelus, at Kirkthorpe,
18; inscription on Angelus, 35; blessing of them
at Malta, 65

Bellini (Vincent), portrait, 90, 273, 353

B. (E. M.) on Ugo Foscolo, 279

Benedict of Peterborough, "Chronicle," 19

Bentham (Thos.) "On the Temptation of Christ," 501
Berkeley (George), bishop of Cloyne, portrait, 481
Berlichingen (Götz von), his iron hand, 35

Bernard (Dr. C. B.), Bishop of Tuam, consecrators,
288, 363

Bernard (Francis), M D., his MSS., 376
Bernardino Lombardi, his works, 256
Bethune (Dr. Alex. Neil), Bishop

educated, 309

Niagara, where

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