“God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb,”
will find many earlier instances of this proverbial expression quoted in our First Vol. pp. 325. 357. 418.
REPLIES RECEIVED.—Breeches Bible—Curse
of Scotland—John Sanderson—St.
Saviour’s, Canterbury—Frozen Horn—Under
the Rose—Lynch Law—“Talk
not of
Love”—Darby and Joan—Robertson
of Struan—Wolf and
Hound—Difformis—Culture of Imagination—Lachrymatories—Synod
of
Dort—Bunyan and Hobbes—Booty’s
Case—Lucy and Colin—Black Rood
of
Scotland—Ferling—Portraits of
Bishops—Time when Herodotus wrote—Fronte
Capillata—Separation of Sexes in Church—Touching
for the Evil—True
Blue—St. Paul’s Clock—Annoy—Umbrella.
VOLUME THE SECOND OF NOTES AND QUERIES, with very copious INDEX_, is now ready, price_ 9s. 6d. strongly bound in cloth. VOL. I. is reprinting, and will, we hope, be ready next week.
NOTES AND QUERIES may be procured, by order, of all Booksellers and Newsvenders. It is published at noon on Friday, so that our country Subscribers ought not to experience any difficulty in procuring it regularly. Many of the country Booksellers. &c., are, probably, not yet aware of this arrangement, which will enable them to receive NOTES and QUERIES_ in their Saturday parcels._
All communications for the Editor of NOTES AND QUERIES_ should be addressed to the care of_ MR. BELL, No. 186. Fleet Street.
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TO BOOK BUYERS.—WILLIAM BROUGH, 22. Paradise Street, Birmingham, has just published a Catalogue of upwards of 10,000 Volumes of Second-hand Books, which may be had Gratis on Application; by Post, Four Stamps. Books of every Description, and in any Quantity, purchased.
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Mr. Maccabe’s Romance of the Dark Ages,
BERTHA.
“The book is able, learned, and instructive to a degree wholly unusual in works of its class.”—Weekly Chronicle.
“We gladly recommend a work, the learning, purity, and interest of which must please all kinds of reader.”—Morning Chronicle.
“The mere novel reader will value it for its exciting adventures, its touching incidents, and its dramatic interest; while it will be acceptable to the historical student for its vigorous grasp of historic character, and to the antiquarian for its information relating to the Dark Ages.”—Morning Post.
“It is treated with the learning of a scholar, and the grace of an experienced writer.”—News of the World.
See also NOTES AND QUERIES, January 11th.
Also, Vols. I. and II. A CATHOLIC HISTORY of ENGLAND. By W.B. MACCABE, Esq.
“A work of great literary value.”—The Times.
T.C. NEWBY, 30. Welbeck Street, Cavendish Square.
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