Sn'iS. VIII. Sept. 3. '59.] 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



199 



pleadings called Bursam-wicke, alias Barham- 

 wicke apud Angmeiing." (1 Rep. 88. b.) Per- 

 haps on the principle " noscitur a soclis," the 

 enumeration of the lands comprised in the deed 

 set out in the pleadings will assist your corre- 

 spondent W. O. W. It is dated 25 Sept. 1 & 2 

 Philip & Mary, 1554, and contains a covenant by 

 Edward Shelley of Warminghurst, in the county 

 of Sussex, Esq., to suffer a recovery of — 



" The manners of Wonninghurst, Barhamwicke and 

 Fj'ndon, with the appurtenances in the said County- of 

 Sussex, and all other his lands, tenements, possessions, 

 and hereditaments, with the appurtenances, set, Ij'ing, 

 and being in Fyndon, VVormiughurst, Barhamwicke, 

 Patching, Estangmering, Wastangmering, Wj-genholt, 

 Sterington, Washington, Ashington, Grenestede, Ashe- 

 hurst, Stening, Wiston, Thackham, and Shipley, in the 

 said Countj', except onlj' the manners of Sillington and 

 Cobden, with the appurtenances, in the said County, and 

 except also all those lands, tenements, and hereditaments 

 called or known by the names of CobJen, Pulleto, Firses, 

 and Pahnershcombe, with their appurtenances." — 1 Rep. 

 00. 



Some of these, I believe, are names of parishes. 



The special verdict in this case discloses the 

 following pedigree, of the accuracy of which there 

 can be no doubt : — 



John Shelley, of Mycliel Grove, Esq. 



Edward of 'Worminghurst,=Johauna (it does not appear 

 ob. 9 Oct. 1 & 2 P. & M., who she was). 

 1554. Qu. whether the 

 eldest or ouly son. 



Henry, ob. vita patris (it does not appear who his wife 

 I was : her name was ^nn). 



Richard, 

 vlv. 1578. 



MaAa. 



Heury (the defendant), nat. post ob. patris. 



David Gam. 



Z. Latimers (2"* S. viii. 119.) — Lord Latimers 

 is a slip of the pen for the Cavendish of Latimers, 

 now Lord Chesham. C. 



Swiss Maps (2'"i S. viii. 90.) —J. M., if intend- 

 ing only a general tour through Switzerland, 

 without attempting any of the more difficult passes, 

 will probably find Leutholdt's map (Zurich) suffi- 

 cient. It is certainly the best general map. Stu- 

 der's map of the valleys between the Simplon 

 route and the Pennine chain (Karte der sildlichen 

 Wallisthaler, von G. Studer, Zurich) is, however, 

 of great value even to the ordinary tourist who 

 intends to visit the valleys of Saas or Zernatt ; 

 much more so, and indeed essential, to any ex- 

 plorer of the high passes in the neighbourhood. 

 His geological map (on the basis of Ziegler's), 

 somewhat larger than Leutholdt's, is an excellent 

 substitute for a general map, though the colour- 

 ing is of course rather confusing for ordinary 

 purposes. Though tlie Swiss Federal Survey is 

 too bulky for general use, I have found single 

 sheets, cut up and stretched on cloth in the usual 

 way, quite invaluable and not incommodious. 

 Sheet No. 17., for instance, includes the district 



from Vevay to Kanderstig; and sheet No. 18. 

 that from the latter village to the Grimsel — the 

 limit to the north being a line passing close to 

 Lauterbrunnen ; and to the south, a line drawn a 

 little north of Martigny and south of St. Nicolas. 

 The sheets containing the Oberland and the dis- 

 trict around Zernatt are not yet published. J. 

 M. will find these published sheets, and I dare say 

 the other maps I have named as well, at Mr. 

 Stanford's, Charing Cross. 



South of the Alps, two sheets of the six-sheet 

 Sardinian Survey will give the whole northern 

 frontier of Sardinia, reaching south beyond Aorta 

 and Borgo Ticino. There is an excellent one- 

 sheet government map of Sardinia reduced from 

 the above. The larger Sardinian Survey, in some 

 thirty or forty sheets, is of course out of the ques- 

 tion ; though invaluable for a special district, and 

 cheap — 4s. per sheet. It is still in course of pub- 

 lication. The district due south of Monte Rosa 

 has been issued, but not that in the neighbour- 

 hood of the Val Pelline. 



The Alpine Club have just published the maps 

 that accompany their Peaks, Passes, and Glaciers, 

 in a separate form at 3s. 6d. These are of course 

 local, but most valuable for the districts in ques- 

 tion, as correcting many errors in the existing 

 maps. 



1 may add that the Practical Guide to Switzer- 

 land, 2s. 6d. (Longman & Co.), is an admirable 

 appendix to Murray, and that both should be 

 taken. A. B. M. 



Glasgow. 



The Reprint, in 1808, of the First Folio Edi- 

 tion of Shakspeare (P' S. vii. 47.) — I should feel 

 greatly obliged to your correspondent F. C. B., if 

 he would kindly favour me with the loan of Mr. 

 Upcott's collation of this reprint. 



I have the volume, and should very much like 

 to make notes in its margin of the 368 typogra- 

 phical errors, having neither time nor opportunity 

 for making a collation with the original. 



If F. C. B. will kindly entrust me with the 

 document, I can assui'e him that every care shall 

 be taken of it, and that it should be returned in a 

 short time. Wm. Wabdlaw Reid. 



Peckham Rye. 



Benjamin Cudworth (2""* S. viii, 167.) was a 

 fellow-commoner of Christ's College. He has 

 Latin verses in the University collection on the 

 accession of William and Mary, 1689. On King 

 William's visit to Cambridge, 7th Oct. in the same 

 year, Mr. Cudworth was created M.A. 



C. H. & Thompson Cooper. 



Cambridge. 



Richard Medlicot (2""^ S. viii. 167.) was of St- 

 Peter's College, Cambridge 5 B.A. 1618-9; M.A. 

 1622. C. H. & Thompson Cooper. 



