Notes and Queries, Number 14, February 2, 1850. Various

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Notes and Queries, Number 14, February 2, 1850 - Various

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couplet without being absolutely a fool.'"

      I have also the following memorandum in a common-place book of mine, but I do not remember from what source I transcribed it many years past:—

      "The couplet, thus erroneously ascribed to the author of Hudibras, occurs in a small volume of Miscellaneous Poems, by Sir John Mennis, written in the reign of Charles the Second, which has now become extremely scarce. The original of the couplet may, however, be traced to much higher authority, even to Demosthenes, who has the following expression:—

      '[Greek: Anaer ho pheugon kai palin machaesetai]',

      of which the lines are almost a literal translation."

      While on the subject of quotations, let me ask whether any of your correspondents can tell me where the passage, "Providence tempers the wind to the shorn lamb," is to be found?

      Among a few of the many floating quotable passages universally known, without any trace of the authors, among general readers and writers, are the following:—

      "When wild in woods the noble savage ran."

      DRYDEN's Conquest of Grenada.

      "And whistled as he went for want of thought."

      DRYDEN's Cymon and Iphigenia.

      "Great wits are sure to madness near allied,

      And thin partitions do their bounds divide."

      DRYDEN's Absalom and Achitophel, st. i. I. 163.

      "The tenth transmitter of a foolish face."

      SAVAGE.

      "When Greek meets Greek then comes the tug of war."

      NAT. LEE.

      The real line in Lee is—

      "When Greeks join Greeks then was the tug of war."

      LEE's Alexander the Great.

J.W.G. GUTCH

      I wish to ask a few questions, referring to these lines, if you do not think the subject already exhausted by Mr. Rimbault's curious and interesting communication.

      1. Does not the entire quotation run somewhat thus:—

      "For he that fights and runs away

      May live to fight another day;

      But he that is in battle slain

      Can never hope to fight again"?

      2. Are the two last lines in the Musarum Deliciæ?

      3. May not the idea suggesting the two first lines be traced to some passage in one of the orations of Demosthenes, and, PAST him, to the "[Greek: Anaer ho pheugon kai palin machaesetai]" of some contemporary, if not still older writer?

      4. Whose Apothegems [qy., those of Demosthenes?] are under consideration on folio 239., from which Mr. Rimbault quotes?

      Queries 1, 2, 3 have long stood in MS. in my note-book, and I should much like to see them in print, while the subject to which they refer is still fresh in the minds of your readers.

MELANION

      The lines—

      "For he that fights and runs away

      May live to fight another day,"

      resemble the following quatrain in the Satyre Menippée, being one of the several verses appended to the tapestry on which was wrought the battle of Senlis:—

      "Souvent celuy qui demeure

      Est cause de son meschef;

      Celuy qui fuit de bonne heure

      Peut combattre de rechef."

A.J.H.

      NOTES FROM FLY-LEAVES, No. 5

      In the library of St. John's College are some hundreds of volumes bequeathed to it by Thomas Baker; most of these have little notices on the fly-leaves, some thirty or forty of which seem worth printing. One (Strype's Life of Parker) has marginal notes throughout the book, the value of which will be duly appreciated by those who have read Baker's notes on Burnet's Reformation. (See the British Magazine for the last year.)

      Hereafter, if you do not object, I hope to send larger extracts from Baker's MSS.; at present I confine myself to a single specimen, taken from the fly-leaf of a copy of Noy's Compleat Lawyer, London, 1665. (St. John's Library, Class mark, I. 10. 49)

      "Gul. Noye de S. Buriens. Com. Cornub. Armig. unus Magistrorum de Banco fieri fecit, 1626. On a window in Lincoln Inn's Chapell. See Stow's Survey, &c. vol. ii. lib. ii. p. 73.

      "This book has a former edition, London, 1661; but not so fair a print, and without the Author's Life.

      "See Fuller's Worthies in Cornwall, p. 200.

      "See Mr. Gerard's Letter to Lord Strafford, dated Jan 3. 1634. Mr. Noy continues ill, & is retired to his house at Brentford: I saw him much fallen away in his Face & Body, but as yellow as Gold—with the Jaundice—his bloody waters continue with drain his Body.

      "See Lloyd's State Worthies, p. 892, 893. &c.

      "Aug. 9. [1634] Wm Noy Esquire the King's Attorney died at Brainford.—Mr. Ric. Smith's Obituary.

      "See Wm Noy's Will (very remarkable) MS. vol. xxx. p. 309.

      "16th Dec. 1631. Conc. Ornatissimo viro Gulielmo Noye, ut sit de Consilio Universitatis—et annuatim 40th recipiat, &c.—Regr. Acad Cant.

      "See Howell's Letters, sect 6. pp. 30, 31.

      "Rex 27. October. 1632 constituit Willielmum Noye Arm. Attornatum suum Generalem, durante beneplacito.—Rymer, tom. 19. p. 347.

      "See his (W.N.) will, very pious except the last clause, which is next to impious. vol. xxxvi. MS. p. 379.

      "Young Noy, the dissipanding Noy, is kill'd in France in a Duell, by a Brother of St. John Biron; so now the younger Brother is Heir and Ward to the King.—A Letter to Lord Deputy Wentworth, vol. ii. p. 2 dat. Apr. 5. 1636."

      It may be as well to add, that the references to vols. xxx. and xxxvi. of MS. are to two different copies of the will in two volumes of Baker's MSS., in the University library. The word "dissipanding," in the last quotation, doubtless is an allusion to "dissipanda" in the will itself. I once had occasion to take a copy of this will, and found the variations between the two copies trifling.

J.E.B. MAYOR

      [We shall be obliged by our correspondent forwarding, at his convenience, the proposed copies of Baker's MS. notes.]

      THE PURSUITS OF LITERATURE

      Many years ago, the satirical poem, entitled The Pursuits of Literature, engaged public attention for a very considerable time; the author concealed his name; and from 1796 at least to 1800, the world continued guessing at who could be the author. Amongst the names to which the poem was ascribed were those of Anstey, Colman, Jun., Coombe,

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