Obrazy na stronie
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Cleopatra is swept away, and their union is regarded as a political job on both sides. In The Fortnightly for this month Signor Ferrero resumes this "discovery" of his, but we note that he has to ignore or regard as worthless the evidence of writers who distinctly support the traditional view. Readers must form their own conclusions on the matter that is, if they are acquainted with the sources of evidence; it is needful always to remember that the motives and compelling causes of human action are uncertain, and can only be guessed as a rule. Even if we had an autobiography by Anthony, we could not be sure that he was not doing injustice to history.

When we come to The Republic of Augustus,' as the last volume is called, we think the author is entitled to claim unusual sagacity for his comprehension of the spirit of the efforts of the "princeps," or first man in the State. The very last thing that Augustus desired was a dictatorship, and the way in which he tried to make the most of a decadent and increasingly useless Senate is well brought out. All the more credit is due to him, indeed, if he was as weak and feeble in health as is indicated. Under the year 3 A.D. we find a remark that he had been "apparently upon the verge of the grave for the last fifty years." This is the sort of exaggeration unwarranted by evidence which makes us distrust Signor Ferrero. His account of the young Tiberius, the failure of other proposed successors to Augustus, and the return of the future Emperor to "Rome, which he had left seven years before at the height of his power and reputation" is as vivid as anything he has done. In fact, the excellence of the reading throughout is a tribute alike to the original and the powers of the translator. On the whole, we are disappointed with Signor Ferrero's judgment, which seems to us singularly biassed on many important points, but we are none the less grateful for the chance of reading his book to the end. It is the right sort of history, for it is history which has life in it. Here we have a "savant who has nothing of the

"cadavre" about his work.

The Judgment of Paris. By the Hon. Emmeline
M. Plunket. (John Murray.)

third millennium B.C. (p. 106). Achilles, it has been conjectured, was an aqueous, if not, indeed, a fishy deity; and is not Fomalhaut, which means the mouth of the fish" (Arabic Fûm-al-haut), situated in the constellation Piscis Australis (p. 117)? Still we remain sceptical.

We are asked further to believe that the tragedy of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra has been evolved out of a total eclipse of the sun in the constellation of Aquarius in the eleventh solar mouth of a zodiacal year, Clytemnestra being in some way the moon and Ægisthus, Capricorn (p. 151). "The Judgment of Paris," which gives its title to the book, is resolved into a calendrical myth. Paris may perhaps mean equality (par certainly does in Latin), and consequently may be the season of the vernal equinox, and in that capacity has been called to arbitrate as umpire between the goddesses Athene and Hera, who presided over the winter solstice, and Aphrodite who presided over the summer solstice (pp. 87, 88). The marriage of Zeus and Hera, of Jupiter and Juno, is only a poetical way of intimating a reformation of the Calendar (p. 76). We are to think of Odysseus as symbolizing the period of time included in a lunar month, and therefore as partaking of the ap parently wandering and inconstant nature of the moon which governs such months" (p. 131). There is nothing here distantly approaching demonstration. What the writer says of certain of her own theories we would extend to all: "These speculations must appear to be founded, and indeed are founded, on very uncertain data” (p. 39).

EDWARD MERTON DEY.-We regret to hear of the death of Mr. Edward Merton Dey, of St. Louis, Missouri, whose name has been familiar for many years to readers of N. & Q'as that of one of its most regular contributors of Shakespeariana. He retained his affection for N. & Q.' till the end, his widow sending us, in compliance with one of his last requests, some notes on Antony and Cleopatra,' which we hope to print in due course.

Notices to Correspondents.

We must call special attention to the following notices:

A CERTAIN School of mythologists has been tempted to read a meaning out of perhaps into-the constellations, which no doubt is there if we only possessed the key to it. The grotesque, and often To secure insertion of communications correarbitrarily, assigned figures which they bear, invite spondents must observe the following rules. Let an inquiring mind to investigate the primitive each note, query, or reply be written on a separate thought which must have suggested them. Their slip of paper, with the signature of the writer and extreme antiquity is beyond doubt. Miss Plunket such address as he wishes to appear. When answer. calculates that they date back to 6000 B.C. It is ing queries, or making notes with regard to previous almost equally certain that the early Babylonians entries in the paper, contributors are requested to who first fixed these names on the starry sphere put in parentheses, immediately after the exact had some mythological notions which inspired heading, the series, volume, and page or pages to these strange combinations, if we only knew what which they refer. Correspondents who repeat they were. Miss Plunket thinks she has discovered queries are requested to head the second comsome of them in the legends of the Greek heroes, munication " Duplicate." and she displays a considerable amount of learning in putting forward her views, though she is more at home (as she confesses) with astronomical science than with mythological and philological lore. We may say at once that her identifications are of a highly speculative character, and to us at least have failed to carry the smallest degree of conviction. We still doubt if the swift-footed Achilles was ever evolved out of the star Fomalhaut, which was a quickly setting star about the

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to "The Editor of 'Notes and Queries'"-Adver-
Editorial communications should be addressed
tisements and Business Letters to
lishers"-at the Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancery
"The Pub-
Lane, E.C.

J. B. MCGOVERN ("Merril Board").-Another name for nine men's morris. See the article on "merel" in the 'N.E.D.'

H. P. L.-Forwarded.

INDEX.

TENTH SERIES.-VOL. XI.

RECENTLY PUBLISHED,

[For classified articles, see ANONYMOUS WORKS, BIBLIOGRAPHY, Books
EPIGRAMS, EPITAPHS, FOLK-LORE, HERALDRY, OBITUARIES, PROVERBS AND PHRASES, QUOTATIONS,
SHAKESPEARIANA, SONGS AND BALLADS, and TAVERN SIGNS.]

A

A. on H.M.S. Calliope, 349
'Star,' 1789, 449

A. (A. E.) on fire engines, 57
Shakespeariana, 424

Abbeys, Saxon, ante 1066, 89

Abbot (John), Westminster scholar, 469
Abbots mitred, 16, 117; Valle Crucis, 346
Abbott (T. K.) on Spanish stories in Irish, 368
Abdul the Damned, origin of appellation, 410, 456
Aberdeen, maps and plans, 508

Abracadabra, transliteration of the word, 418
Abrahams (A.) on Little Russell Street, 325

London shop fronts, 407

Mechanical road carriages, 305
Old Serjeants' Inn, 436
Pall Mall, No. 93, 16

Parcel post in 1790, 18

'Abridgement of Calvin's Institution,' 1586, 488
Ackerley (F. G.) on Grindleton, 67

Addleshaw, derivation of the name, 189, 297
Adrian IV. (Pope), his biography, 70
Advertising epitaph, 112

Aeroplanes, early flying machines, 8, 98, 145,425,465
Æsop's Fables,' 1821, its illustrations, 270, 398
Aiguesparses (Madame C.) on Cuthbert Shields, 10
illage Blacksmith' parodied, 10

Aisle, use of the term, 267

Aitken (G. A.) on Daniel Defoe's wife, 516

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Jonson's Works,' 421

Aldersgate signs, 102

Aldress, use of the word, 1541, 346
Aldworth, Sussex, and Tennyson, 325

Alkali (Scrap Hager), authority on pearls, 169, 218
Alley aisle, use of the term, 267

All Hallows E'en: tokens, 6

Allied Armies before Sebastopol,' engraving, 189
Allot (R.), Errors in Englands Parnassus, 4, 123,
204, 283, 383, 443, 502

Almshouses, Kingsland, 124

Alsop (Vincent), Puritan author, 47, 114, 195
Ambassadors, French, in London, 1560-70, 128
Ambrose (John), University College graduate, 129
American genealogies, 49, 175

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Anderson (H.) on Though lost to sight," 438
Anderson (P. J.) on Ewen Maclachlan, 150
Angel of Meridian, his identity, 148

Angus (Rev. George), his death, 279

Animals, dead, exposed on trees and walls, 413, 518
Anne (Queen), compared with Jezebel, 341
Anonymous Works:-

Dunno's Originals, 9
Excursion to Jersey, 507
Lights in Lyrics, 18

Anonymous Works:-

Love-à-la-Mode, 1663, 38

Matin de la Vie, 388

Young Lawyer's Recreation, 47

Anscombe (A.) on Aro-setna in 'Nomina Hidarum,'
126

Anstruther-Gray (W.) on population of ancient
Rome, 187

Anthony's Nose in New York State, 227

Antwerp (W. C. van) on authors of quotations
wanted, 9

Aplin (H. F.) on Aplin family, 335
Aplin family, 250, 335

Apperson (G. L.) on chamber-horse for exercise, 114
Gaol literature, 511

Loker (Timothy), 389

London shop fronts: "Chapzugar cheese,"
455

Mechanical road carriages, 498

'Monstrous Regimen of Women,' 235
Thimbles, 116

Williams (Roger), of Rhode Island, 346
Arabic numerals, their present form, 154
Arabic words, their pronunciation, 352
Archer (H. G.) on armorial wine-bottles, 247
Guard aloft, 35

Archibald (R. C.) on Baltimore and "Old Mor-
tality "Patersons, 25, 218

Patterson (Governor Walter), 207
Arden, Westminster scholar, 129
Arkle (A. H.) on aerial navigation, 98
Blue Coat School costume, 97
Coleridge (Hartley), 217

Field Memorials to sportsmen, 415
Longmans, 51

'Millennial Star,' 116

St. Mary the Egyptian, 390
Semaphore signalling, 211

Southcott (Joanna) and the black pig, 137
Arman (Anne)= Charles FitzGeffrey, 1604, 49
Armitage (H.) on William Bullock on Virginia, 169
Armorial wine-bottles, 247

Arms of English Roman Catholic bishops, 176;
of married women, 296

Army Lists, their history, 55, 153

Arnott (Thomas Haggerston), his family, 29
Aro-setna in the Nomina Hidarum,' 126

Artahshashte for Artaxerxes in Barker's Bible,
148, 216, 294

Artificial, connected with artifice, 166

Ascension Day celebrations, 381

Aspinshaw, printing-press maker, 429
Aspirine, origin of the name, 290, 352
Astarte on doctrine of signatures, 209
Astley (Henry), Westminster scholar, 129

Atkinson (Richard Mosley) of Clare Coll., Camb., B. (G, F. R.) on Burney (James), 308
108, 178

Atton (H.) on John Paul or Paul Jones, 447
Atwood (Dr.), Worcester oculist, and Dr. Johnson,
103

Aubrey (John), his marriage, 266

Aunt Sally: Sallee, 305

Auriol (Charles James), matriculated at Oxford,
108, 177, 213

Austen (Canon G.) on Blue Coat School costume,47
St. Anthony of Vienne, 47, 152
Austen (Joseph), postboy, d. 1909, 247
Austin (Roland) on Promptoriuni,' 14
Tolsey at Gloucester, 15

Automata, collection of, c. 1811, 345
Automaton dancers, Dickens on, 289, 357
Aviation, early attempts, 8, 98, 145, 425, 465
Axon (W. E. A.) on copyright in letters, 125
Davis (Crusoe Richard), 425

·

Sea-Roamers: Johnny Wolgar, 146

Young Lawyer's Recreation,' 47

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Axton (E. H.) on Dumas and Shakespeare, 290
Roast pigs crying Who 'll eat me? 296
Ayeahr on Curious House, Greenwich, 32
Elizabeth (Queen), her day, 13
Howard (Lady Honoria), 66
Parcel Post in 1790, 17

Aylesbury, farmers of, and Straits of Malacca,

410, 453, 470

Ayres (H. M.) on May's Julius Cæsar,' 248

Ayton (Richard), his

Wolgar, 146

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Sea-Roamers

B

B. on William O'Brien, 488

Young (Joseph), 488

: Johnny

B. (A. T.) on English topographical pottery, 337
B. (C. C.) on " Before one can say Jack Robinson,"

233

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B. (G. D.) on Rev. William Cox, 195
Gurney (Dr. Robert), 214
Tyrrell (Capt. Richard), 481

Tyrrell's March: Tyrrell's Pass, 317

B. (G. F. R.) on John Abbot, 469

Ambrose (John), 129

'Anthology,' by Thomas Bee, 108
Arden (W.), 129

Astley (Henry), 129

Atkinson (Richard Mosley,) 108

Auriol (Charles James), 108

Bale (Otway), 170

Bligh (Richard), 149

Brett (Thomas), 449

Cary (Henry), 329
Corbridge (James), 208
Cowper (Spencer), 308
Ellison (Henry), 170
Glasse (Isaac), 269
Harris (Joseph), 230
Hayes (Samuel), 149
Hesilrige (Sir Arthur), 308
Ingram (James), 429
Kensell (James), 329
Kitchen (Robert), 289
Leigh (Lyster), 469
Mears (James), 269
Medley (Edward), 230

Meredith (Richard), Dean of Wells, 410
Montagu (Sir James), 388
Montresor (Major John), 410

Neile (Richard), Archbishop of York, 388
Osbaldeston or Osbolston (Lambert), 371
Steward (Richard), 289, 455
Stuart (Sir John), 329
Taylor (Sir Robert), 329
Webb (Richmond), 208

B. (G. R.) on Rev. Thomas Nicolson, 306
B. (G. S.) on vagrancy, 226

B. (H. I.) on English poem in Welsh metre, 367
Gray: two references, 236

London: origin of the name, 303

Place-names: their etymology, 398
Shakespeariana, 243

Village names feminine, 297

Violet in Welsh, 207

B. (J.) on Sir Humphrey Gilbert's last words, 447
Hen, white, 448

Recusants' marriages, 373, 475
St. Sidwell, 377

B. (P. G.) on Belfour family, 293
B. (R.) on Egypt as a place-name, 94
Manor house, c. 1300, 18

Mitred abbots, 117
Parcel Post in 1790, 17
Partrendune, Bucks, 388

Place-names, 454

"Quid est fides?" 296

Yew trees in churchyards, 113

B. (R. S.) on " Before one can say Jack Robinson,"

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Gaunox, 357

Harbours, 514

Hawser, 307

Lickbarrow (Isabella), 38

Manor Court terms, 517

B. (R. W.) on Fleetwood of Calwich, 183
B-r (R.) on Bourne in place-names, 451
Burial half within a church, 318
Epitaphiana, 504
Horse Hill, 155
Marylebone, 356

B. (W.) on Catalaunian fields, 88
Shoe in A.V., 133

St. Mary the Egyptian, 391

B. (W. C.) on Befana: Epiphany, 6
Briefs for Greek Christians, 357
Corpus Christi Day, 443

Daylight-saving, 226

Dickens's" automaton dancers," 357
Easter bibliography, 282

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Bayne (W.) on Sir David Wilkie's pictures, 329

Baldock (G. Y.) on 3rd Foot Guards at Bayonne, Bayonne, 3rd Foot Guards at battle of, 69, 192,
276

Melbourne (Lord) and Baldock, 9

Sainte-Beuve on Castor and Pollux. 392

Baldwin (E. T.) on "punt" in football, 355
Bale (Otway), Westminster scholar, 170, 214
Ball (E. J.) on " He which drinketh well," 53
Ball (F. Elrington) on Edouard or Edouart, 371
Baltimore and Old Mortality" Patersons, 25, 218
Bandy Leg Walk, its name, 35

Bank-note sandwich story, 447, 514

Banner (Parliamentary) in the Civil War, 89, 177
Barclay (John), Theodorus Prodromus, and
Burton, 101

Barkas (A. A.) on Edward Barnard, 28
Barking Abbey and William the Conqueror, 447
Barkly West, S. Africa, place-name, 325
Barlow (W.), Bishop of Chichester, 51
Barlow (W.), Bishop of Rochester, 51
Barnard (Edward), head master of Eton, his
marriage, 28, 116

Barnard (G. W. G.) on Sir Thomas Browne, 473
Barnard & Staples, Cornhill bankers, 189, 252
Barton (Bernard), his Metrical Effusions,' 389
Battle-field memorials, 441
Baughan: Boffin, derivation of the name, 509
Bayley (A. R.) on Æsop's Fables,' 1821, 398
Aplin family, 335

Belfour family, 293

Bishops of St. Asaph, 435

Britannia as the national emblem, 274
Burial half within a church, 230

Canopied pews, 273

Carstares or Carstairs, 397

Coffee-drinking in Palestine, 90, 358

Cromwell (Oliver), his head, 390

English queen as Jezebel, 458

Episcopal scarf or tippet, 295

Essex's Irish campaign, 154
Eton College names, 351
FitzGeffrey (Charles), 49
Gainsborough's wife, 38

Glose or gloss, French verse-form, 337
Gordon (Mrs.), née Isabella Levy, 114
Meredith (Richard), Dean of Wells, 474
Milton: portrait as a boy, 52
Names terrible to children, 53
Nym and humour," 156

Pack (F. Christopher), 297

Polhill family, 315

Ruckholt House, 92
Scroyles, 418

276

Beachey Head, its derivation, 186, 294, 358
Beaconsfield (Lord) and the primrose, 37; and
"Defixionum Tabellæ," 186, 276; his first
schoolmaster, 362, 454

Beating the Bounds in 1763, 384, 497
Beaven (A. B.) on Sir Lewis Pollard, 365

Scrope (Adrian), 117

Townshend (C.), M.P., 282

Beaver (H.M.S.), c. 1828, inquired after, 189
Bêche-de-mer, use of the word, 482
Beckford queries, 386, 438

Beddoe (J.) on Capt. Rutherfurd at Trafalgar, 454
Beddows (H. T.) on field memorials to sportsmen,
196

Bedwell (C. E. A.) on Spencer Cowper, 377
Bee (Thomas), his Anthology,' 108, 218
Beechey (E. M.) on Chantrey and Oliver, minia-
turists, 29

Beeswaxers, football boots, 187, 237, 297
Beezely, place-name, its locality, 475

Befana Epiphany, Roman folk-lore, 6, 72
Belfour family, 250, 293

Bell (E.) on Oliver Cromwell's head, 389
Bell (James C. C.) Jane Strangman Mead, 429
Bell customs at Lisbon, Leicestershire, 16
Bell-horses, nursery rimes, 295
Bellagio, inscriptions at, 325
Bells rung backwards, 297, 397
Belton, epitaphs at, 505

Benedictine, manufacture of the liqueur, 57

Ben Meir in Longfellow's Scanderbeg,' 248, 318
Bennet (Thomas), bookseller, d. 1706, 488

Bensly (E.) on authors of quotations wanted, 32,

316

Barclay, Theodorus Prodromus, and Burton,
101

Bells rung backwards, 397

Breakspear (N.), Pope Adrian IV., 70

Burton and Jacques Ferrand, 286

Burton's Anatomy': presentation copy, 65

"Care, vale! sed non æternum," 226

Chinese proverb in Burton's Anatomy,' 168
Crucified thieves, 395

Dickens's" knife-box," 116

"Falsehood of extremes," 234

Hippocrates and the black baby, 271

King's Classical and Foreign Quotations,' 247
Mechanical road carriages, 431

Melampus and the Saint, 353

Morante (Marquis de): his book-plate, 366

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Bensly (E.) on Name-puzzle in early Spenser, 334
One shoe off and one shoe on,' 434
Owen (John) the epigrammatist, 21, 156
Pennecuik (Alexander) and the Louvre, 416
Roman law, 38

Roman legions: their badges, 412
Rome, ancient, its population, 273
Seventeenth-century quotations, 356
Silesian tooth, 336

Stevenson and the housemaid, 518
Swinburne and Maupassant, 505
Thackeray's Latin, 206

"Though lost to sight," 498

Wilbraham and Tabraham, 173

Bergerode in map of Lancashire, 218, 338, 434, 513
Berkeley (Bishop), pronunciation of his name, 348
Berkshire, portion of Wiltshire in, 269
Bernales Buildings, origin of the term, 289
Beta on telegraph wires, 229

Bettesworth (Capt.), killed 1809, his statue, 468
Bew (J.), bookseller, 188, 256, 416, 498
Bewickiana, 268

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283, 383, 443, 502

Gaol, 428, 510

Harbours, 409, 452, 514

Italian genealogy, 14, 73

Jonson (Ben), 421

Khayyam (Omar), 54

Machlachlan (Ewen), 90, 150
Noorthouck (John), 301
Nuge Antiquæ,' 161
Peacock (T. L.), 43, 224

Place-names, their etymology, 288, 398, 454
Shakespeare, 366

Tennyson: concordances, 261, 353, 513;
additions to Mr. Wise's Bibliography,' 322
Wild (Jonathan), 347, 435

Wilde (Oscar), 254
Witchcraft, 386, 491

Bickerton or de Bickerton family, 189

Bilker, use of the word in 1717, 166

Birkbeck (R.) on "Master Pipe Maker," 10
Birkenhead, place-rime, 145

Births, marriages, and deaths, their registration,
348

Bisham Abbey, cartulary, 210

Bishop, first English to marry, 51, 147

Bishops, scarves worn by, 130, 295, 494; of
St. Asaph, 147, 435

Bishops, English Roman Catholic, their arms, 176,
Bishops, suffragan, their arms, 109, 193

Black (W. G.) on "Defixionum Tabellæ "
Disraeli, 186

:

Blackborough (William) and John Milton, 13
Blackburne (Abp.), grave in St. Margaret's, West-
minster, 508

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Black guard, use of the term 1513, 446
Blake (William) and Gymnastics,' 287
Blancherd or Blancher, Alderman of Hull c. 1640,
69

Blazers, origin of the word, 287, 333

Bleackley (Horace) on Bank-note sandwich, 447
Bew (J.), bookseller, 416

Bullock (Thomas), sportsman, 507
Casanova in England, 437

Davies (Black), 507

Day (Nancy), Lady Fenhoulet, 393
'Diaboliad,' by William Combe, 458
Ferrers (Earl), 434

Fisher (Kitty), her death, 245;
Gaol literature, 511

Goadby (M.), publisher, 470

Hangmen who have been hanged, 468
Johnson's uncle hanged, 429
Ladies' cricket matches, 386

La Roche (Miss), Lady Echlin, 501
Marie Antoinette's death mask, 327
Mechanical road carriages, 374
'Modern Ship of Fools,' 429
Moore (Zachary), 429

Moran (C.), publisher, 490

Morangiés (Comte de), 411

Murray (Fanny), her death, 466

Mystery of Hannah Lightfoot, 472

Nanny Natty Cote: Lucy Locket, 397

Townshend (Ethelreda, Viscountess), 498

Tracy (Handsome), 197

Truman (T.), bookseller, 347

Tuesday Night's Club: Mrs. Cornelys, 415
Vergy (Treyssac de), 370

Wild (Jonathan), bibliography, 435
Wilkes's Essay on Woman,' 493

Bligh (Richard), 1780-1838, his biography, 149,

214

Blind, earliest asylum for, 348, 435
Blue Coat School costume, 47, 96

Blundell (E.) on dew-ponds, 428

Bobbery, origin of the word, 187, 234

Boffin: Baughan, derivation of the name, 509

Boleyn (Anne), her execution and burial, 88, 237
Bolland (W. C.) on St. Anthony of Vienne, 153, 332
Bonassus, wonderful animal, 356
Bonefons, poem attributed to, 26
Bononcini and Handel, epigram, 426

Books: emendations in English, 401 ;] produced
in prison, 428

Books recently published:-

Almack's (E.) History of 2nd
(Royal Scots Greys), 478

Dragoons

Archæologia Eliana, Third Series, Vol. V.,
458

Baptist Historical Society, Transactions,
Vol. I., No. 2, 499

Barnes's Poems, ed. by T. Hardy, 99

Bible, 1611, Authorised Version, ed. by W. A.
Wright, 358

Bleackley's (H.) Ladies Fair and Frail, 398
Brückner's (A.) Literary History of Russia,

ed. by Ellis H. Minns, tr. H. Havelock, 259
Burke's (Sir B. and A. P.) Peerage and
Baronetage, 219

Burlington Magazine, 39, 119, 199, 298, 380,
479

Butler (S.), Notebooks, Characters
Passages, ed. by A. R. Waller, 58

and:

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