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dedicated to St. Bartholomew; and its origin is mentioned in the "Hundred Rolls" (7 Edw. I. = 1279), where we read :—

"The House of St. Bartholomew without Oxford was founded by the old King Henry (1100-1135), who married the good Queen Maud, and it was assigned for the accommodation and support of infirm lepers," &c.

It is also mentioned in the "Patent Rolls," 51 Hen. III., m. 29 (1266); and that it was a celebrated hospital is shown by the numerous gifts to it in succeeding years, as may be seen by reference to the "Patent Rolls" of Edwards II. and III., in the former of which reigns it was restored. It was much damaged during the civil war, and again restored in 1651. Wood mentions a quaint service which was held there on Ascension Day by the Fellows of New College.

It will thus be seen that this chapel had no connection with the Templars of Cowley; so that if the underground passage referred to by your correspondent can be traced at all, it might possibly lead to the site of the old Templars' church. Still if the passage exists it is worth investigation, and if your correspondent could send me any further particulars he may have collected about the old house, I should be much obliged, as I hope, if possible, to be able to visit the house and to examine it thoroughly.

J. P. EARWAKER,

Hon. Sec. Oxford Architectural Society. Merton College, Oxford.

MEDAL OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR (4th S. viii. 454.)- Supposing the story true, and the medal that was found was what is ordinarily called a medal, it must have been "planted," as pennies (silver) alone were coined by William the Conqueror, but I cannot answer for what he struck when only Duke of Normandy.

NEPHRITE.

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CARNAC (4th S. viii. 478.)--The name Carnac (properly Karnak) has been translated by Ducange burying-place or cemetery." A Mrs. Stothard, on the authority of a priest, says "carnac" in the Breton language signifies "a field of flesh." The name properly means "heaps of stones," from Bas-Bret. karn, pl. karnek, karnez. Conf. the W. carn (pl. carnedd) Gaelic carn, a cairn; carnach, abounding in cairns. R. S. CHARNOCK.

Gray's Inn.

P.S.-Carnac would translate "field of flesh" in Gaelic, but no in Armoric or Bas-Breton.

ORMISTON CROSS, HADDINGTONSHIRE (4th S. viii. 478.)-I quote from the Statistical Account, Edin. 1845, ii. 141 :—

"There is an old cross in the centre of the village. It seems to have been connected with a Roman Catholic

chapel, which about the beginning of the last century stood where the cross now is, extending across the street from north-west to south-east. That chapel was then used as the school-house, and one of the oldest inhabitants, now dead, told me he was educated there. Several of the parish records are dated in that school-house."

About the year 1829 or 1830:

in some danger of falling; to prevent which, it was sub"The stones of the base were much decayed, and it was stantially repaired by means of a subscription, and is now in a state to stand for ages."

1855, vol. i.) will be found some interesting notices In Jeffrey's History of Roxburghshire (Jedburgh, of crosses still existing in that county. According to the Statistical Account (vol. already mentioned, Berwickshire, p. 56), there is a "cross or monument of white sandstone at Crosshall, about a mile to the north of the village of Eccles"; and we learn from a footnote that a description and drawings of this cross are to be found in the Trans. Soc. of Antiq. Scotland, 1792, vol. i.

Newcastle-on-Tyne.

J. MANUEL.

There is a market cross in the centre of the

village of Doune, Stirlingshire. I speak from a recollection of forty years ago, but, doubtless, it still remains. It then stood on rather dilapidated shallow steps; a narrow column of one stone having some kind of animal sitting on its hind quarters on the top. W. B. SCOTT.

"AN-HUNGERED" (4th S. viii. 435, 528.)-I regret to find that I am wrong in supposing this form to have originated with Tyndale. I did look in Stratmann's Dictionary, as MR. FURNIVALL recommends, and in others besides. Dr. Stratmann, under the word hungren gives ofhungren as the only compound; and this misled me. But he gives also anhungren under the heading and, with references which carry the word back to the time form (the prefix being the A.-S. and-, G. ent-) of Edward II. Anhungered is therefore a genuine existing side by side with ofhungren (where the prefix is the intensive of-). I still think, however, that the latter form is the older of the two; at any rate, it can be traced further back. I have already shown that of- and on- were used as prefixes in a nearly convertible manner. rection is due to MR. FURNIVALL.

This cor

WALTER W. SKEAT.

Miscellaneous.

NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC. Prolegomena to Ancient History: containing Part 1. The Interpretation of Legends and Inscriptions; Part II. A Survey of Old Egyptian Literature. By John P. Mahaffey, A.M., M.R.I.A., Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, and Lecturer on Ancient History in the University of Dublin. (Longmans.)

This volume contains the more essential parts of a series of lectures delivered by the author in the University of Dublin. The essays are, as the author says, not

so much history as prolegomena to history, being chiefly occupied in discussing the nature and the value of our evidences for human culture antecedent to that of Greece and Rome. The adverse judgment pronounced by our author on Thukydides (the orthography is Mr. Mahaffey's) is sure to provoke criticism; but the information which the lecturer has collected on Egyptian and cuneiform writing, and his General Survey of Old Egyptian Literature, in which he notices and records the labours of Continental and English scholars, will, as we have no doubt he justly anticipates, be acceptable not only to those who are now entering upon such studies, but to a larger class, who desire to weigh fairly the value of recent discoveries in enlarging our knowledge of Ancient History.

Character. By Samuel Smiles. (Murray.)

Under this brief title the author of Self Help has published an interesting series of Essays on Influence of Character; Home Power; Companionship and Example; Work; Courage; Self-Control; Duty-Truthfulness; Temper; Manner-Art; Companionship of Books; Companionship in Marriage; and The Discipline of Experience; which abound with right feeling and strong common sense. While as Mr. Smiles has the happy gift of illustrating the principles which he lays down by appropriate examples, the book is alike amusing and instructive; and just such an one as a judicious parent would like to place in the hands of his son on his entrance on the business of life.

To, At, and From Berlin. By R. F. H., Author of "Blythe House." (Wyman.)

A graceful and pleasant account from the pen of a lady of a journey to Berlin in June, 1871, for the purpose of witnessing the triumphal entry of the German army after their return from the Franco-German war; containing in addition to an account of that great scene, good notices of the chief objects of interest at Berlin. The Romance of Trade. By H. R. Fox Bourne. (Cassell.) Seeing that we are essentially a "nation of shopkeepers," and are not ashamed of being so, but the rather rejoice in it, Mr. Bourne may be congratulated on having chosen a subject which cannot fail to be popular. For, as the author well remarks, the whole history of trade, if read aright, is as interesting as it is instructive; for in it are to be found incidents and episodes as striking as in any other history. It has, therefore, not been a difficult task to prepare such a gossip-book about commerce as the one before us. A capital Index adds materially to the value of the work.

Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe. Pictured by L. Frölich, and narrated by Charlotte M. Yonge, Author of “The Heir of Redclyffe." (Macmillan.)

It would seem from the title-page that, in the work before us, the usual course of proceeding in the preparation of this book has been reversed; and Miss Yonge, instead of calling upon Herr Frölich to set off her story with his pictures, has employed her well-skilled pen to illustrate the pretty sketches of the German artist. But the result is very satisfactory; and her juvenile readers, while amusing themselves with Lucy's Wonderful Globe, will pick up a good deal of useful information respecting foreign countries and the characteristics of their inhabitants.

LORD BROUGHAM.-On Saturday last, at the Annual Public Meeting of the Académie des Sciences, Morales et Politiques, M. Mignet delivered an address on the life and labours of the late Lord Brougham, who was at the time of his death the oldest Foreign Associate of the Academy.

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Notices to Correspondents.

NOTES AND QUERIES of Saturday next will contain among other interesting articles

Napoleon on Board the Northumberland.
How to describe a Book.

The Birth-place of Ennius.

Three Letters of Charles I. on his Marriage.
Other "Blue Boys."

"Goody Two Shoes" and the Nursery Literature of the last Century.

The Earl of Essex's Pocket Dial.
Was Anna Boleyn born in Ireland?
Superstition in the German Army.

Being anxious to include a large number of Replies in the present number, we have postponed until next week many Notes and Queries of interest, and ubridged our usual Notes on Books.

THOMAS RATCLIFFE.-The Cornish arms are a field sable with fifteen bezants, not balls. These arms were borne by Condurus, the last Earl of Cornwall of British blood, in the time of William I., and were so borne until Richard, Earl of Cornwall, on being created Earl of Poictou, took the arms of such. See "N. & Q." 1st S. iv. 174.- The newspaper entitled The English Mercurie. 1588, is clearly a forgery, as stated in "N. & Q." 3rd S. ix. 373.

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R. O. C. (Glasgow.)-For the practice of wood-engraving consult the following works: Art of Wood-Engraving. a Practical Handbook, by Thomas Gilks, 1867; Art of Wood-Carving, by George Alfred Rogers, 1867; Manual of Wood-Carving, by W. Bemrose and L. Jewitt, 6th edit. 1868; and Instructions in Wood-Engraving, by S. E. Fuller, 1868.

P. S. W. (Winchester.)-Burlesque (Italian, burlesco) is jocular, tending to raise laughter by unnatural or unsuitable language or images.Extravaganza is anything out of rule, as in music, the drama, &c.

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RUPTURES. BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.

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MR. JOHN WHITE, 228, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Price of a Single Truss, 168., 218., 26s. 6d., and 31s. 6d. Postage 1s. Double Truss, 31s. 6d., 42s., and 52s. 6d. Postage 1s. 8d. An Umbilical Truss, 42s. and 52s. 6d. Postage 1s. 10d. Post Office orders payable to JOHN WHITE, Post Office, Piccadilly.

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OLLOWAY'S OINTMENT AND PILLS.-

HoWinter W proverbially thNTMENT AND then the Dood

requires purification, the digestion demands thorough and attentive regulation, and all the secretions call for correction. Holloway's remedies supply all these necessaries for securing health: the one overcomes cutaneous diseases, sores, ulcerations, abscesses, carbuncles, and all visible imperfections: the other acts most potently in cleansing the circulation, strengthening the stomach, governing the liver, regulating the bowels, and reducing the entire system to order. Thus these twin medicaments furnish the most efficient medicine-chest available for family use. It is easier, through Holloway's discovery, to point out the remedy than to describe the disease; into the former no fallacy can intru le; into the latter prejudice may unwittingly creep.

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On receipt of a Post Office Order, or reference, any quantity will be forwarded immediately by

MA

HEDGES & BUTLER,

LONDON: 155, REGENT STREET, W. Brighton: 30, King's Road.

(Originally Established A.D. 1667.)

ANILA CIGARS.-MESSRS. VENNING & CO. of 14, ST. MARY AXE, have just received a Consignment of No. 3 MANILA CIGARS, in excellent condition, in Boxes of 500 each. Price 21. 10s. per box. Orders to be accompanied by a remittance. N.B. Sample Box of 100, 10s. 6d.

CANDLES.

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patented Candles. Under the name of the "Westminster Wedge
Candles" they are supplied as follows:-
Transparent Paraffine,

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Composites of all Qualities,

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And Chamber Candles, 12 Candles in a Box. May be obtained of all Dealers throughout the United Kingdom.

CHLORALUM,

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CHLORALUM POWDER.
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MESSRS. BENTLEYS' LIST.

HOLBEIN and his TIME. By Professor

WOLTMANN. Translated by F. E. BUNNETT. 1 vol. small 4to. with Sixty beautiful Illustrations from the chief Works of Holbein. 31s. 6d.

LETTERS and other WRITINGS of the late EDWARD DENISON, M.P. for Newark. Edited by SIR BALDWYN LEIGHTON, BART. Demy 8vo, 78. 6d.

LETTERS from INDIA. By the Hon. Emily

EDEN, Authoress of " Up the Country.'

2 vols. crown 8vo, 21s.

The FORTUNATE ISLES; or, the Archi

pelago of the Canaries. By M. PEGOT-OGIER. Translated by FRANCES LOCOCK. 2 vols. crown 8vo, 21s.

MEMORIES of the BRITISH MUSEUM.

By ROBERT COWTAN. With a Photograph of Marochetti's Bust of Panizzi. 8vo, 148.

JERUSALEM, the CITY of HEROD and SALADIN. By WALTER BESANT, M.A., and E. H. PALMER. M.A., Lord Almoner's Professor of Arabic in the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of St. John's College. Crown 8vo, 78. 6d.

WANDERINGS in WAR TIME; being

Notes of Two Journeys taken in France and Germany in the
Autumn of 1870 and the Spring of 1871. By SAMUEL JAMES
CAPPER. Crown 8vo, 68.

RICHARD BENTLEY & SON, New Burlington Street. Publishers in Ordinary to Her Majesty.

In Quarto, with Engravings. Price 21. 10s. FAMILY RECORDS

OF THE

BRUCES AND THE CUMYNS.

WITH AN HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION AND APPENDIX FROM AUTHENTIC PUBLIC AND PRIVATE DOCUMENTS.

By M. E. CUMMING BRUCE.

WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, Edinburgh and London.

Now ready, price 4s. 6d., cloth boards.

THREE NOTELETS ON SHAKSPEARE. 1. SHAKSPEARE IN GERMANY.

II. THE FOLK-LORE OF SHAKSPEARE.
III. WAS SHAKSPEARE EVER A SOLDIER?

BY WILLIAM J. THOMS,

A Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries.

"On this subject of Shakspeare in Germany, Mr. W. J. Thoms has reprinted a paper read some years ago before the Society of Antiquaries, together with two other Notelets on the Poet, The Folk Lore of Shakspeare.' from the ATHENEUM, and Was Shakspeare a Soldier?' from NOTES AND QUERIES. Not the least of Mr. Thoms's many services to English literature is the invention of that admirable word folk-lore, which appeared for the first time in these columns only a few years ago, and has already become a domestic term in every corner of the world. His illustration of Shakspeare's knowledge of this little world of fairy dreams and legends is a perfect bit of criticism. He answers the query as to Shakspeare having seen martial service in the affirmative; and therein we think his argument sound, his conclusion right. These 'Notelets' were very well worthy of being collected into a book." Atheneum.

J. RUSSELL SMITH, 36, Soho Square.

HRONICLES OF THE ANCIENT BRITISH CHURCH, previous to the arrival of St. Augustine, A.D. 596. Second Edition. Post 8vo. Price 5s. cloth.

"A work of great utility to general readers."-Morning Post. "The author has collected, with much industry and care, all the information which can throw light on his subject."-Guardian. London: W. MACKINTOSH & CO., 24, Paternoster Row, E.C., and of all Booksellers.

EARLY ENGLISH ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY. THE DOMESDAY of ST. PAUL'S, TAKEN IN 1222.

With an Introduction. Notes, and Illustrations. By the late VENERABLE ARCHDEACON HALE. Small 4to, cloth boards, price 10s. REGISTER OF THE PRIORY OF

ST. MARY, WORCESTER.

Edited by the late VEN. WILLIAM HALE HALE. Archdeac
London. Small 4to, cloth boards, 108.

"Archdeacon Hale's volume, which may be considered a compar on to the Domesday of St. Paul's, is no whit less important......The greater portion of the volume consists of a descriptive rental of the Benedictine Monastery of Worcester in the middle of the thirteenth century. These documents are illustrated with great industry and learning, and much information as to the relation of the Church to the State and to the Land may be gathered from its pages." Notes and Queries.

MESSRS NICHOLS 25, Parliament Street, Westminster.
EARLY ENGLISH AND LATIN
DICTIONARY.

Half-morocco, Roxburghe Style. Price 21s. PROMPTORIUM PARVULORUM SIVE CLERICORUM.

The earliest English Dictionary, A.D. 1440. Edited from Harl. MS. 221, with Corrections from other MSS. and Pynson's Edition, by ALBERT WAY, A.M.

"The PROMPTORIUM itself, simply reprinted, would have been a boon to English Philologists; but in this handsome quarto of some six hundred pages, we have not only the result of Mr. Way's collation of all the various MSS. and printed editions of that important work, but in his explanatory notes a mass of philological and archaeological learning illustrative of our early language and ancient manners, such as we believe nobody but Mr. Way could have produced; and this vast amount of curious knowledge is made most readily available ly capital indexes. The editor's Introduction is full of most, curious scholarship, and is in itself a valuable contribution to Literary History."-Notes and Queries.

MESSRS. NICHOLS, 25, Parliament Strect, Westminster.

NOTES & QUERIES. UNITED GENERAL INDEX. Now Ready, price 15s. boards, containing Indexes to First, Second, and Third Series, 1849-1867, bound in One Volume, facility of reference being secured by having the edges differently coloured, as in the Post-Office Directory.

"An index to a book of miscellaneous character is what a key is to a lock. The casket may contain articles of almost infinite value; there may be in it something you have long missed, or the very paper you especially desire to find. Turn you the key and know' is the advice of Shakespeare. If there be no key or, being one, you have it not, you must remain unsatisfied. Just so with Notes and Queries. The contents of the Third Series are multifarious, there being few subjects of literary inquiry which are not touched upon in some of the 10,000 or 15,000 articles it contains. To grope through the whole is next to impossible, and, therefore, inquirers will be grateful for the General Index just issued, which will enable them at once to turn to the part of the volume which they desire to consult. But what the publisher calls the United General Index,' in which the indexes to the three series are bound in one volume (facility of reference to each index being assured by having its edge differently coloured, as in the divisions of the PostOffice Directory), may be called a master key, since it opens the door to information upon some 50,000 different headings, relating to almost every conceivable subject. So that, even to those who do not possess Notes and Queries, this United General Index will prove a very useful library companion."-Times, Jan. 13, 1869.

W. G. SMITH, 43, Wellington Street, Strand, and all Booksellers and Newsinen.

Printed by SPOTTISWOODE & CO., at 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the County of Middlesex; and Published by WILLIAM GREIG SMITH, of 48, Wellington Street, Strand, in the said County-Saturday, December 30, 1871.

Queries, with No. 212, an. 20, 1872. Š

INDEX.

FOURTH SERIES.-VOL. VIII.

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

A

. on Bacon of "The Times," 25

Parish registers of Barbados, 36
Whitgift pedigree, 88

A. (A. M.) on time of funerals, 86

Abdie, its derivation, 77, 174, 272

Altenberg, stained-glass windows at, 146, 444
Amateur Authors' Club, 158

American state nick-names, 282, 379

American taxation and English placemen, 163
Amery (Arthur) on recitations, 329

Ammergau passion play, 100, 318, 494
Ampersand, 311, 387, 468, 555

A'Beckett (Gilbert Albert), sketch of the Duke of Anderson (James), letter to the baillie of Monkairn

Cumberland, 116, 143, 233

Abell (Mrs. Elizabeth), death, 59

Abhba on Bishop Wm. Cottrell, 516

Sackville (Lord George), 185

Ache on Calvary on tombs, 470

"Cast for death," 458

Quotations, 418

Acon, or Acre, an order of knighthood, 448

Adams (John Quincy)," Letter on Hamlet," 26

Addis (John) on Chaucer's "Miller's Tale," 22;
"Reeve's Tale," 144; "Hawe-Bake," 301
"Great griefs are silent," 254

Moon-gathered darnels, 132
Shoeing the goose, 335

Spira (Francesco), 235

"The man shall have his mare again," 147

Addison (Joseph), supposed to be quoted, 515

A. (E. H.) on two centenarians, 85

A. E. I. on jewellery, 410

Elia Lælia Crispis, an enigmatical name, 56, 92
Agard, Agar, Egar family, 298, 377

A. (G. B.) on Robert Courthose's tomb, 353
Survey of crown lands, 486

Agnesi (Maria), curve called "the witch," 109, 157
A. (H.) on christening bit in Edinburgh, 506
A. (H. E.) on Leslie, Earl of Rothes, 152
Ailmar (Bishop), his will, 125, 217, 292
Ainger (Alfred) on ampersand, 468

A. (J. E. F.) on Ailmar, bishop of Almham, 292
Garret and Gerald, 479

A. (L.) on Philip Scarlett, 127

Allam (Andrew) of St. Edmund's Hall, Oxford, 46
Allen (Thomas), projected "History of Southwark,"
353, 461

All-to, as an adverb, 6, 71, 148, 271

Almanacks, Yorkshire, 518

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