Notes and Queries, Number 43, August 24, 1850

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Notes and Queries, Number 43,
August 24, 1850

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Title: Notes & Queries, No. 43, Saturday, August 24, 1850 A Medium
Of Inter-Communication For Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries,
Genealogists, Etc.
Author: Various
Release Date: September 9, 2004 [EBook #13406]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES &
QUERIES, NO. 43, ***

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NOTES AND QUERIES:
A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN,
ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
* * * * *

"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
* * * * * {193}
No. 43.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1850 [Price Threepence.
Stamped Edition 4d.
* * * * *
CONTENTS.
NOTES:-- Notes and Queries. 193 Collar of SS. 194
Tenyson--Coleridge--Extract from Baker's MSS. on Barth. Dodyngton,
and William Jenkin, by J.E.B. Mayor. 195 Parallel Passages. 196 Folk
Lore:--Power of Prophecy--Bay Leaves at Funerals--Shoes (old)
thrown for Luck--Roasting Mice for Hooping-Cough--The Story of Mr.
Fox--Baptismal Superstition--Rushbearing. 196
QUERIES:-- Who wrote Shakspeare's Henry VIII.? by Samuel Hickson.
198 Minor Queries:--The Abbé Strickland--Works on
Aerostation--Pilgrims' Road to Canterbury--"Ædricus qui signa
fundebat"--Osmund, the Waterman--Logic--Darbon
Gatherall--Damasked Linen--Flourish--Drax Abbey and Free
School--Ancient Catalogue of Books. 198
REPLIES:-- Shakspeare's Use of the Word "Delighted," by S.W. Singer.
200 Family of Love. 201 Translation of the Philobiblon. 202
Etymological Queries, by S.W. Singer. 203 Replies to Minor
Queries:--Lord Richard Christophilus--Poker--Querela
Cantabrigiensis--"One Bell"--Fabulous Account of the Lion--Pomfret
on the Thames--Walrond Family--Armenian Language--Genealogical
Query--Richard Baxter's Descendants--Duresme and Dunelm. 204
MISCELLANEOUS:-- Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 207
Books and Odd Volumes Wanted. 207 Notices to Correspondents. 207
Advertisements. 207
* * * * *
NOTES
NOTES AND QUERIES
The history of books and periodicals of a similar character ought to be
the object of interest to the readers of this work. The number of works
in which answers have been given to proposed questions is not small.
Not to mention the Spectator and its imitators, nor the class of
almanacs which give riddles and problems, nor mathematical
periodicals of a more extensive character,--though all these ought to be

discussed in course of time,--there yet remains a class of books in
which general questions proposed by the public are answered
periodically, either by the public or by the editors. Perhaps an account
of one of these may bring out others.
In 1736 and 1737 appeared the _Weekly Oracle; or, Universal Library.
Published by a Society of Gentlemen._ One folio sheet was published
weekly, usually ending in the middle of a sentence. (Query. What is the
technical name for this mode of publication? If none, what ought to be?)
I have one folio volume of seventy numbers, at the end of which notice
of suspension is given, with prospect of revival in another form
probably no more was published. The introduction is an account of the
editorial staff to wit, a learned divine who "hath entered with so much
discernment into the true spirit of the schoolmen, especially Thomas
Aquinas and Duns Scotus, that he is qualified to resolve, to a hair's
breadth, the nicest cases of conscience." A physician who "knows, to a
mathematical point, the just tone and harmony of the risings pulses...."
A lawyer who "what he this day has proved to be a contingent
remainder, to-morrow he will with equal learning show must operate as
an executory devise or as a springing use." A philosopher "able to give
the true reason of all things, from the composition of watches, to the
raising of minced pies ... and who, if he is closely questioned about the
planner of squaring the circle, or by what means the perpetual motion,
or longitude, may be discovered, we believe has honesty, and we are
sure that he has skill enough to say that he knows--nothing of the
matter." A moral philosopher who has "discovered a perpetuum mobile
of government." An eminent virtuoso who understands "what is the
best pickle to preserve a rattle-snake or an Egyptian mummy, better
than the nature of the government he lives under, or the economy and
welfare of himself and family." Lastly, a man of mode. "Him the beaus
and the ladies may consult in the affairs of love, dress, and equipage."
There is a great deal of good answering to tolerably rational questions,
mixed with some attempts at humour, and other eccentricities, and
occasionally a freedom, both of question and answer, by
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