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John Rogers, Protomartyr (Vol. v., p. 522.). MR. KNIGHT will find some of the information he requires, and perhaps be put on the trace of more, in the Gentleman's Magazine for December, 1849, p. 656.

Restive (Vol. v., p. 535.).-Your correspondent J. R. is surely quite beside the mark, in his observations upon the word restive. He says, "We find it defined in our dictionaries, "unwilling to stir, inclined or determined to rest." I would ask in what dictionary he has seen the last interpretation? Johnson prefers spelling the word restiff; as more resembling the cognate words restivus in low Latin, restif in French, and restivo in Italian. Now those languages know nothing of rest, in the sense of "repose," but only as a derivative from the Latin resto; which is not merely to "stand still," but is occasionally equivalent to resisto. See Gesner's Thesaurus for authorities. That rest

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has two such unconnected meanings as "repose" or "remainder" in our language, is owing to its having come down to us from two unconnected sources: viz. from the Saxon word for rest "sleep," or repose;" and from the French reste, whose source is resto. Restive neither means "determined to rest," nor "restless," but "reluctant ;' if this last word be understood in its original sense, and not merely as something passing in the mind. "He felt rather restive" would mean, in the passage cited by J. R., "He felt rather disposed to make resistance." H. W. Apple Sauce with Pork (Vol. v., p. 395.).— BONIFACE inquires why and when the custom of eating apple sauce with pork was first introduced? It is hoped that the following observation will cause him to enjoy the viands with more relish. A physician having been lately asked whether it was advisable to take cod liver oil in lemon juice, remarked that the acid would assist its digestion, and that our forefathers must have been acquainted with the theory, in eating green gooseberries with mackerel, and apple sauce with pork and goose.

C. T.

Spanish "Veiwe Bowes" (Vol. vi., p. 10.).—The "veiwe bowes" in the inventory quoted by your correspondent J. O. B., no doubt were long bows made of yew, of which wood that which came from Spain was considered best for the purpose. Thus Drayton (Polyolb. 26.) says:

"All made of Spanish yew, their bows are wondrous strong."

"View" is the common name for "yew" in these parts; only yesterday a man was speaking to me of the "view tree" in my garden: so also in the churchwardens' accounts:

1593. "Itm. for leadinge of earthe to y benche about the vewe tree, &c. ijs iiijd." J. EASTWOOD.

Ecclesfield.

"Cane Decane," &c. (Vol. v., p. 523.).—I am sorry to find BAVIUS has given to the couplet beginning with these words an indelicate meaning which the original does not require or even justify. Canis cannot be applied to a woman but in the very worst sense, but every one knows that a dog has been used as an emblem of field sports from the earliest ages. Talbots and greyhounds in heraldry generally allude to sporting characters or offices; and the punning couplet in question was doubtless composed to reprove the sporting disposition of some aged dignitary. The "free translation" by BAVIUS appears to me no translation at all, and is devoid of the pun and the reproof of the original. Perhaps the following gives the sense more truly, yet so imperfectly, that it is scarcely worth inserting:

"CANE DECANE, ETC.

Good Dean Grey, the sportman's lay
Ill becomes thy tresses grey;
Grey-haired Grey! thy theme be then,
Not greyhounds, but grey-hair'd men."

W. H. K.

The Moon and her Influences (Vol. v., p. 400.). -W. H. will find information on the subject by referring as follows:- Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, Old Series, No. 360., New Series, Nos. 124. 208. 310.; Monthly Chronicle, vol. i. p. 60., vol. ii. p. 209.: the Annuaire for 1833 contains an article on the subject by Arago; and facts and fictions may be gathered from Maurice's Indian Antiquities, p. 205.; The Celestial Worlds Discovered; or, Conjectures concerning the Inhabitants, Plants, and Productions of the Worlds in the Planets, by Christianus Huggens, London, MDCXCVIII. and "Lake's Moon Story," which appeared in the American newspapers about fifteen years since, and which may be easily found with the aid of some one familiar with the files.

SHIRLEY HIBberd.

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some particulars will be found in the Archæologia, vol. xxxiv. p. 17. JOHN EVANS. Wyle Cop (Vol. v., p. 44.).—Dr. Plot, in his Natural History of Staffordshire, p. 110., says cop is one of the names used in that county for a mountain, and he lays down on his map "Mole Cop," on the borders of Cheshire, and "Stile Cop," near Rugeley. And here allow me, with all respect, to point out an error which Mr. Halliwell has fallen into in his Archaic and Provincial Dictionary. At p. xxviii. of the Preface he gives White Kennett the merit of preserving many Staffordshire words "probably now obsolete." I have gone carefully through Kennett's MS. Glossary (Lansd. MSS. 1033.), and find about a hundred words assigned to that county; but I have traced them all (and many more not assigned) to Dr. Plot's work published in 1686, from whence I have no doubt Kennett derived them.

Nor must Plot have more praise than he deserves, for inasmuch as many of the words relate either to iron works or coal mines, they occur in the extracts which he gives from Dud Dudley's Metallum Martis, 1665, a small work till lately very rare, but which has recently been accurately reprinted by a gentleman intimately connected with the iron trade of South Staffordshire.

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Mummy Wheat (Vol. v., p. 538.).—In the Illustrated London News for Sept. 22, 1849, is a description of mummy wheat (with an engraving) grown by R. Enoch, of Stow-on-theWold, raised from grains brought from Thebes by the family of Sir William Symonds.

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The Plant Hæmony (Vol. ii., pp. 88. 141. 173. 410.).-Milton, in the passage here referred to, appears to allude to the opinion of those critics who, dissatisfied with the annihilation of the plant Moly by the allegorisers (see Pope's Odyssey, b. 10. v. 361., Ascham's Works, 4to. p. 251., Richardson's Dictionary, art. Moly), identify it with the Nymphæa lutea which grows in Thessaly or Hæmonia (v. Apollon. Rhod. 1. iii. v. 1089.). There is a dissertation on the subject in Wedelii Exercitutiones Medico-Philologica. A ROSICRUCIAN.

Shakspeare, Tennyson, &c. (Vol. v., p. 618.). In connexion with A. A. D.'s quotation, "Cinerem in flores mutari, idque contingere non nisi probis ac pulchris," let me quote Sir John Mandeville's origin of roses (cap. vi.):

“And betwene the citye (Bethlehem) and the chirche, is the Felde Floridus; that is to seyne, the Feld florisched; for als moche as a fayre mayden was don fornycacioun; for whiche cause sche was demed blamed with wrong, and sclaundred; that sche had to the dethe, and to be brent in that place, to the whiche sche was ladd. And as the fyre began to brenne about hire, sche made hire preyres to oure Lord, that als wissely as sche was not gylty of that synne, that he wold helpe hire, and make it to be knowen to alle men, of his mercy fulle grace. And

I believe wheat of this description may be procured of any first-rate London seedsman. Some was exhibited in the Crystal Palace. METAOUO. Squire Brown's Fox Chase (Vol. v., p. 537.).—whan sche hadde thus seyd, sche entred into the fuyer; If I am not mistaken in the ballad referred to by R. S., he will find some account of it in Edwards's Tour of the Dove, stanza xvi., with the notes on the stanza. H. N. E. Seth's Pillars (Vol. v., p. 609.).—ANON. will find the legend of Seth's pillars treated of in Stillingfleet's Origines Sacræ, lib. i. R. F. L.

Edmund Bohun (Vol. v., p. 539.; Vol. vi., p. 21.).—I have reason to believe, what indeed the answer to my Query plainly shows, that the "Collections, 1675-1692" are not identical with the "five years' collections" mentioned in the title of the Great Historical Dictionary. These

and anon was the fuyr quenched and oute; and the brondes that weren brennynge, becomen red roseres ; and the brondes that weren not kyndled, becomen white roseres, fulle of roses. And theise weren the first roseres and roses, both white and rede, that evere ony man saughe."—P. 83., ed. 1727. Bitton.

Miscellaneous.

NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC.

H.N.E.

The members of the Surtees Society have just received two books, with which if they are not well content,

they must indeed be hard to please. The first of these, Boldon Luke, a Survey of the Possessions of the See of Durham, made by Order of Bishop Hugh Pudsey, in the Year 1183. With a Translation, an Appendix of Original Documents, and a Glossary, by the Rev. W. Greenwell, is by the Editor very justly described as "the Domesday of the Palatinate;" and its importance to the historical inquirer, whether he be interested in the nature of early tenures, the descent of property, or the social conditions of the tenants, in whatever rank, of that day, can indeed scarcely be overrated. It was compiled at the Feast of St. Cuthbert, in Lent in the year 1183, by order of Hugh Pudsey, the then Bishop of Durham, and is a description of the revenues of the bishopric, and an enumeration of the settled rents and customs renderable to the bishop, as they stood fixed at the time of its compilation. The original MS. is not now known to exist, and the work before us has been printed from a copy preserved in the Auditors' Office in the Exchequer at Durham, compared with one in the Registrum Primum of the Dean and Chapter, and another in the Bodleian. The work has been edited with great care, and been rendered doubly useful by its translation and carefully compiled Glossary.-The second book is altogether of a different character, being a Biography of the learned and accomplished gentleman in honour of whose memory the society was founded. It is entitled A Memoir of Robert Surtees, Esq., M. A., F. S.A., Author of the History of the County Palatine of Durham; by George Taylor, Esq.: a new edition, with Additions, by the Rev. James Raine, &c., and exhibits a delightful picture of the life of an antiquary of the right sort. With the true feelings of a gentleman, and the education of a scholar, imagination and fancy enough for a poet, a hearty relish for old English humour, and all these good qualities leavened throughout by the genuine spirit of real Christian benevolence, it is little wonder that Robert Surtees gained the love and esteem of all who knew him-from Reginald Heber and Walter Scott, down to every hardhanded husbandman who dwelt round Mainsforth. Mr. Surtees' magnificent history of his native county sufficiently attests his zeal, industry, and historical acquirements; but the present volume, in giving us the picture of the author of that work, paints the man, and in so doing explains why the Surtees Society was called into existence.

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BOOKS RECEIVED. Bohn's Standard Library has this month been enriched by two volumes. The firstMemorials of Christian Life in the Early and Middle Ages, including his Lights in Dark Places, by Dr. Augustus Neander - is a further translation by Mr. Ryland of the writings of this eminent continental divine. The second is Frederika Bremer's Works- The Neighbours, a Story of Every-day Life, and other Tales, viz. Hopes, The Twins, The Solitary, The Comforter, A Letter about Suppers, Trälinnan, translated by Mary Howitt, who has carefully corrected them by the latest Swedish edition, and must be well pleased at the success which has attended her introduction of Frederika Bremer to the reading public of England. The second and concluding volume of Kirby's Bridgewater Treatise On the Power, Wisdom, and Goodness of God, as manifested in the Creation of Animals, and in their

History, Habits, and Instincts, edited with notes by Professor Rymer Jones is the new volume of the Scientific Library; and it would be difficult to find a book more fit to be a country companion during this season of sea-shore rambling and country musings. All who are about to sojourn for a while far from the busy haunts of men will do well to adopt our advice, and put these two volumes into their portmanteau; we shall be sure of their thanks. Mr. Bohn has also added two volumes to his Classical Library: namely, a fourth volume of Cicero's Orations, translated by Mr. Younge; and the first volume of The Comedies of Plautus literally translated into English Prose, with Notes by Mr. Riley, a work which promises to be of considerable interest and merit.

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THE

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