Notes and Queries, Number 189, June 11, 1853. Various

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Notes and Queries, Number 189, June 11, 1853 - Various

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of Treaty between the Two Crowns, he durst not of himself send them without Order from the King his Master, or the King and Queen here: And said farther, That the Queen had left an express Command for their stay here; and that he would be ever ready to do any good Office for this House, and to keep a good Correspondency between the Two Crowns; and if this House pleased, he would undertake to keep them safe Prisoners at Somersett House; and that the chapel there shall have the doors locked, and no Mass be said there.

      "Ordered, That Mr. Hollis do acquaint the French Ambassador, that this House doth accept of his Offer in securing the Persons of the Capuchins, till this House take farther Order: and that the Doors be locked, and made fast, at the Chapel at Somersett House; and that no Mass be said there.

      "Ordered, That the Lord Cramborne and Mr. Hollis shall acquaint the French Ambassador with the desires of this House, that the Capuchins be forthwith sent away; and to know if he will undertake to send them away; and, if he will, that then they be forthwith delivered unto him.

      "That Mr. Hollis do go up to the Lords, to acquaint them with the Resolutions of this House, concerning the Capuchins, and desire their Lordships' concurrence therein."

      Some particulars of the proceedings of the parliament against the Capuchins may be found in "Memoirs of the Mission in England of the Capuchin Friars of the Province of Paris by Father Cyprian Gamache," in The Court and Times of Charles I., vol. ii. pp. 344. 354.

Thompson Cooper.

      Cambridge.

      EARLY SATIRICAL POEM

      On the turning over the pages of an old printed copy of Durand's Rationale Divinorum Officiorus, edited by Bonetus de locatellis bergomensis, and printed at Lyons in 1506, by Natalis Brabam, for Jaques Huguetan, I found the following copy of verses written on the fly-leaf. They are written in a hand which I am inclined to assign to a date not much later than that of the book. There is no clue to the author. If they are thought worthy of insertion in "N. & Q.," I beg to inquire, through the medium of your columns, whether they are to be found in any collection of early English poems? and whether the author is known?

      The ungallant sentiment of the first three stanzas is obvious. The fourth is not so plain; nor is its connexion with the others evident, though it is written without anything to mark separation; and the word "finis" is placed below it, as if to apply to the whole. I should be obliged if some one of your readers would give some explanation of it.

W. H. G.

      Winchester.

      "Wen [sic] nettylles in wynter bryngythe forthe rosses red,

      And a thorne bryngythe figges naturally,

      And grase berrythe appulles in every mede,

      And lorrel cherrys on his crope so hye,

      And okkys berrythe datys plentyusly,

      And kykkys gyvythe hony in superfluans,

      The put in women yower trust and confydenc.

      "When whythynges walke forrestys hartyse for to chase,

      And herrings in parkkys the hornnys boldly bloc,

      And marlyons2 … hernys in morrys doo unbrace,

      And gomards shut ryllyons owght of a crose boow,

      And goslyngs goo a howntyng the wolf to overthrow,

      And sparlyns bere sperrys and arms for defenc,

      Then put yn women yower trust and confydenc.

      "When sparrowes byld chorchys and styppyllys of a hyght,

      And corlewys carry tymber yn howsys for to dyght,

      Wrennys bere sakkys to the myll,

      And symgis3 bryng butter to the market to sell,

      And wodcokkys were wodknyffys the crane for to kyll,

      And gryffyns to goslynges doo obedienc,

      Then put in women yower trust and confydenc.

      "O ye imps of Chynner, ye Lydgatys pene,

      With the spryght of bookkas ye goodly inspyrryd,

      Ye Ynglyshe poet, excydyng other men,

      With musyk wyne yower tong yn syrryd,

      Ye roll in yower rellatyvys as a horse immyrryd,

      With Ovyddes penner ye are gretly in favor,

      Ye bere boys incorne, God dyld yow for yower labor.

      Finis."

      THE LETTERS OF ATTICUS

      The editor of the Grenville Papers has alluded to some "very judicious and pertinent remarks in the 'N. & Q.'" respecting the Letters of Atticus, and as most of your readers will probably agree with him that the authenticity of these letters is "a curious and interesting question, and one that deserves very particular attention," I beg to correct an error into which he and others have fallen, as to the date when Junius ceased to write under the signature Atticus. The Atticus forwarded by Junius to George Grenville on the 19th October, 1768, was, there is every reason to believe, the last from the pen of that writer, who was then preparing to come before the public in a more prominent character. When another correspondent adopted the signature Atticus, Woodfall gave his readers warning by inserting the following notice into the Public Advertiser:

      "The Address to the Freeholders of the county of Middlesex, signed Atticus, in our next. The Printer thinks it his duty to acquaint his readers that this letter is not by the same hand as some letters in this paper a little time since, under the signature Atticus."—Pub. Ad., March 19, 1769.

      The printer took the like course when writers attempted to "impose upon the public" by using the signatures Lucius and C., and then freely inserted their letters; but when the same trick was tried with Junius, the printer did not scruple to alter the signature, or reject the contribution as spurious.

      The genuine Letters of Atticus have had a narrow escape lately of being laughed out of their celebrity by writers in some of our most respectable periodicals. The authenticity of these letters up to the 19th October, 1768, is now fully established. The undecided question of the authorship of Junius requires that every statement should be carefully examined, and (as far as possible) only well-authenticated facts be admitted as evidence in future.

William Cramp.

      Minor Notes

      Irish Bishops as English Suffragans.—In compliance with the suggestion of J. M. D. in your last volume, p. 385., I abridge from The Record of March 17th the following particulars:

      "At a recent meeting of the Archæolgical Society the Rev. W. Gunner stated that from a research among the archives of the bishops and of the college of Winchester, he had found that many Irish bishops, during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, were merely titular bishops, bearing the titles of sees in Ireland, while they acted as suffragans to bishops in England. A Bishop of Achonry, for instance, appeared to have been frequently deputed by William of Wykeham to consecrate churches, and to perform other episcopal duties, in his diocese; and the Bishops of Achonry seemed frequently to have been suffragans of those of Winchester. No see exhibits more instances of this expatriation than Dromore, lying as it did in an unsettled and tumultuous country. Richard Messing, who succeeded to Dromore bishopric in 1408, was suffragan to the Archbishop of York; and so died at York within a year after his appointment. His successor John became a suffragan to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and died such in 1420. Thomas Scrope, a divine from Leicestershire, was appointed by the Pope to this see in 1430: he could

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<p>2</p>

Merlin's hawks.

<p>3</p>

Doubtful; but perhaps for syngies, an old name for the finch.