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Notes and Queries, Number 56, November 23, 1850

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2018
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"1729.

"Sep. 4. S

Richard Steel."

There is no monument to his memory in St. Peter's Church; but in Llangunnor church, about two miles from Caermarthen, there is a plain monumental tablet with the following inscription:—

"This stone was erected at the instance of William Williams, of Ivy Tower, owner of Penddaylwn Vawr, in Llangunnor; part of the estate there once belonging to the deservedly celebrated Sir Richard Steele, knight, chief author of the essays named Tatlers, Guardians, and Spectators; and he wrote The Christian Hero, The Englishman, and The Crisis, The Conscious Lovers, and other fine plays. He represented several places in parliament; was a staunch and able patriot; finally, an incomparable writer on morality and Christianity. Hence the ensuing lines in a poem, called The Head of the Rock:—

'Behold Llangunnor, leering o'er the vale,
Pourtrays a scene t' adorn romantic tale;
But more than all the beauties of its site,
Its former owner gives the mind delight.
Is there a heart that can't affection feel
For lands so rich as once to boast a Steele?
Who warm for freedom, and with virtue fraught,
His country dearly lov'd, and greatly taught;
Whose morals pure, the purest style conveys,
T' instruct his Britain to the last of days.'"

Steele resided at White House (Ty Gwyn, as it is called in Welsh), a clean farm-house half way between Caermarthen and Llangunnor church, which is situate on a hill commanding extensive views of one of the prettiest values in Wales. A field near the house is pointed out as the site of Steele's garden, in the bower of which he is said to have written his "Conscious Lovers." The Ivy Bush, formerly a private house, and said to be the house where Steele died, is now the principal inn in Caermarthen.

    WM. SPURRELL.
    Caermarthen.

Cure for Warts (Vol. i., p. 482.)– In Buckinghamshire I have heard of the charming away of warts by touching each wart with a separate green pea. Each pea being wrapped in paper by itself, and buried, the wart will vanish as the pea decays.

    J.W.H.

Etymology of "Parse" (Vol. ii., p. 118.).—Surely to parse is to take by itself each pars, or part of speech. The word does not seem to have been known in 1611 when Brinsley published his Posing of the Parts: or, a most plain and easie Way of examining the Accidence and Grammar. This work appears to have been very popular, as I have by me the twelfth edition, London, 1669. In 1612, the same author issued his Ludus Literarius: or the Grammar Schoole. Both these works interest me in him. Can any of your readers communicate any particulars of his history?

    J.W.H.

MISCELLANEOUS

NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC

Admiration of the works of Holbein in Germany, as in this country, seems to increase with increasing years. We have received from Messrs. Williams and Norgate a copy of a new edition of his Bible Cuts lately published at Leipsic, under the title Hans Holbein's Altes Testament in funfzig Holzschnitten getreu nach den Originalen copirt. Herausgegeben von Hugo Burkner, mit einer Einleitung von D.F. Sotymann, to which we direct the attention of our readers, no less on account of the beauty and fidelity with which these admirable specimens of Holbein's genius have been copied, than of the interesting account of them prefixed by their new editor.

We beg to call the attention of such of our antiquaries as are interested in the history of the Orkneys to a valuable contribution to our knowledge of them, lately published by our accomplished friend, Professor Munch, of the Christiana, under the title of Symbolæ ad Historiam Antiquiorem Rerum Norwegicarum, which contains, I. A short Chronicle of Norway; II. Genealogy of the Earls of Orkney; III. Catalogue of the Kings of Norway—from a MS., for the most part hitherto inedited, and which appears to have been written in Orkney about the middle of the fifteenth century.

While on the subject of foreign works of interest to English readers, we may mention two or three others which we have been for some time intending to bring under the notice of those who know how much light may be thrown upon our early language and literature by a study of the contemporary literature of the Low Countries. The first is, Denkmaeler Niederdeutscher Sprache und Literatur von Dr. Albert Hoefer, Erstes Banchen, which contains the highly curious Low German Whitson play called Claws Bur. The next is a larger, more elaborately edited, and from its introduction and extensive notes and various illustrations, a yet more interesting work to English philologists. It is entitled Leven van Sinte Christina de Wonderbare, an old Dutch poem, now first edited from a MS. of the fourteenth or fifteenth century, by Professor Bormans.

We have received the following Catalogues:—Thomas Kerslake's (3. Park Street, Bristol) Books, including valuable late Purchases; John Wheldon's (4. Paternoster Row) Catalogue of valuable Collection of Scentific Books; W.H. McKeay's (11. Vinegar Yard, Covent Garden) Catalogue of a Portion of Stock.

BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE

EPISTOLAE OBSCURORUM VIRORUM.

CHOIX D'ANECDOTES ORIENTALES. Vol. 11. Paris, 1775.

*** Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, carriage free to be sent to MR. BELL, Publisher of "NOTES AND QUERIES," 186. Fleet Street.

Notices to Correspondents

We venture to call attention to the communications from Bombay and Stockholm, which appear in our present Number, as evidences of the extending circulation, and consequently, we trust, of the increasing utility of NOTES AND QUERIES.

W.S. (Oxford) who inquires respecting Tempora Mutantur, is referred to our First Volume, pp. 215. 234. and 419.

CONTINUATION OF HUME AND SMOLLETT'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND, TO THE PRESENT REIGN.

NEW ENLARGED EDITION OF HUGHES'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND, IN 8vo.

In Seven Volumes, 8vo., price 3l. 13s. 6d. boards.

HISTORY OF ENGLAND, FROM THE ACCESSION OF GEORGE III., TO THE ACCESSION OF QUEEN VICTORIA, BY THE REV. T.S. HUGHES, B.D., CANON OF PETERBOROUGH.

"To produce a Literary Work, justly deserving the name of National, is a rare contribution to our Literature. This MR. HUGHES has done in a conscientious and able manner."—Literary Gazette.

London: GEORGE BELL, 186. Fleet Street.

CHRONICLES OF THE ANCIENT BRITISH CHURCH, prior to the Arrival of St. Augustine, A.D. 596. Second Edition. Post 8to. Price 5s. cloth.

"The Ancient British Church was a stranger to the Bishop of Rome, and his pretended authority."—Judge Blackstone.

WERTHEIM & MACINTOSH, 24. Paternoster Row.

PERRANZABULOE.—FIFTH EDITION.

In small 8vo. price 8s. (with Illustrations), the Fifth Edition of PERRANZABULOE, the LOST CHURCH FOUND; or, the Church of England not a New Church, but ancient, Apostolical, and Independent, and a Protesting Church Nine Hundred Years before the Reformaton. By the Rev. T. COLLINS TRELAWNY, M.A., Rector of Timsbury, Somerset, and late Fellow of Balliol College.

The Volume contains an interesting Account of the Hstory and recent Recovery of the ancient Church of Perranzabuloe, in Cornwall, after being buried in the Sand for Seven Hundred Years.

RIVINGTONS, St. Pauls Church Yard, and Waterloo Place.

ANTI-POPERY.—A Large Examination taken at Lambeth, according to His Majesties Direction, point by point, of M. GEO. BLACKWELL made Archpriest of England, by Pope Clement VIII. &c., 4to., half bound (rare), 1l. 1s. 1607.—History (the) of the Damnable Popish Plot, 8vo., 14s. 6d., 1680.—Foxes and Fire-brandes, or, A Specimen of the Dangers and Harmony of Popery and Seperation, 4to., half bound, 10s. 6d., 1680.—Plot (the) in a Dream, or, The Discoverer in Masquerade, 18mo., plates, calf, neat, (rare), 1l. 1s.—Steel's Romish Ecclesiastical History, 12mo., calf, neat, 5s., 1714.—Gabr. de Emilianne's Fraudes of the Romish Monks and Priests, 2 vols., 8vo., 14s. 6d., 1691—William's (Gr. Bishop of Ossory), Looking Glass for Rebels, 4to., 16s. 6d., 1643.—Histoire de la Papesse Jeanne, 2 vols., 12mo., plates, calf, neat, 16s., 6d., 1720.—Owen's (L.) Jesuites Looking-glass, 4to., half bound, 14s. 6d., 1629.—A Piece of Ordanance invented by a Jesuit for Cowards that fight by Whisperings, &c.; and Six other Curious Tracts in the Vol., 4to., 1l. 1s.—Smith's (Jno.) Narrative of the late Horrid and Popish Plot, &c.; and Nine other Curious Tracts in the Vol., folio, 1l. 11s. 6d.—Marvel's on the Growth of Popery, and various other Tracts, folio, 16s. 6d., 1671-81.—Foxe's Acts and Monuments by BRIGHT, (black letter), 4to., neat, 1l. 11s. 6d., 1589.—Carleton's (Bishop of Chichester) Thankfull Remembrancer of God's Mercie, 4to., calf, neat, 1l. 5s., 1630.—With other Rare and Curious Books on Sale at

W.H. ELKINS, 47. Lombard Street, City.

On the 27th instant, fcp. 8vo. price 7s. 6d., a Third Series of PLAIN SERMONS addressed to a COUNTRY CONGREGATION.

By the late Rev. EDWARD BLENCOWE, Curate of Teversal, Notts; and formerly Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford. Also, A NEW EDITION of the FIRST SERIES, and a SECOND EDITION of the SECOND SERIES, price 7s. 6d. each.

"Their style is simple; the sentences are not artfully constructed; and there is an utter absence of all attempt at rhetoric. The language is plain Saxton language, from which 'the men on the wall' can easily gather what it most concerns them to know.

"Again, the range of thought is not high and difficult, but level and easy for the wayfaring man to follow. It is quite evident that the author's mind was able and cultivated; yet as a teacher to men of low estate, he makes no displays of eloquence or argument.

"In the statements of Christian doctrine the reality of Mr. Blencowe's mind is very striking. There is a strength, and a warmth, and a life, in his mention of the great truths of the Gospel, which show that he spoke from the heart, and that, like the Apostle of old, he could say—'I believe, and therefore have I spoken.'
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