NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[Aug. 11. 1855. 



FOR TRAVEXiIiERS XN 

 ZTAImV. 



TMs Day, copiously illustrated with Coloured 

 Plates and Woodcuts, 8vo., 21j. 



BRICK AND MARBLE 

 ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY. IN 

 THE illDDLE AGES : NOTES of a TOUR. 

 By GEORGE EDMUND STREET, F. S.A., 

 Architect. 



JOHN MURRAY, Albemarle Street. 



Second Edition, with large map, price 63., 

 cloth boards. 



J)RIZE ESSAY ON PORTU- 

 GAL. By JOSEPH JAMES FOR- 

 ESTER, of Oporto, F.R.G.S. of London, 

 Paris, Berlin, ic. Author of " Original Sur- 

 veys of the Port Wine Districts ; " of the 

 " River Douro from the Ocean to the Spanish 

 Frontier;" and of the "Geology of the Bed 

 and Banks of the Douro ;" alsoofa projeotfor 

 the improvement of the navigation of tliat 

 river, and of various other works on Portugal. 



JOHN WEALE, 59. High Holborn. 



WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL, 

 Broad Sanctuary, opposite Westminster 

 Abbey.— The Westminster Hospital was in- 

 stituted in the year 1719, and was the first of 

 the kind in the United Kingdom established 

 and supported by Voluntary Contributions. 

 The principle of admission is based chiefly on 

 the urgency and nature of the symptoms of the 



Salient, and during the past year 1,123 acci- 

 ents and urgent cases have been received aa 

 in-patients without letters of recommendation, 

 while 14,381 out-patients have obtained medical 

 or surgical assistance with no other claim than 

 their sufferings. Patients are constantly re- 

 ceived from distant districts ; admission is also 

 freely given to Foreigners who are ill and in 

 distress ; and relief is often afforded to patients 

 ■who are sent as urgent cases by the clergy of all 

 denominations. The number of patients ad- 

 mitted in 1854 was, in-patients 1, 754, out-patients 

 19,545 _ total 21,299. The demands on the Hos- 

 pital are annually increasing, while the income 

 irom all sources has seriously declined. Thui 

 in 1854,— 



£ s. d. 

 The income was - - - 40G7 2 10 

 The expenditure - - - 6112 19 2J 



Deficiency - - 1445 16 4J 



These increasing demands on the Hospital 

 may, to a certain exteut, be explained by the 

 increase of population. Three wards, affording 

 accommodation for 42 patients, are still un- 

 furnished and unoccupied ; and to open these 

 wards, and thus render the Hospital as efficient 

 as originally designed, would require an in- 

 creased income of 15002. a year, besides the cost 

 of fitting up the wards for the reception of the 

 patients. Efforts are being made to increase 

 the Hospital accommodation of the metropolis, 

 but the duty is more imperative to make the 

 accommodation already existing available. 

 No new establishment is required, no additional 

 officers, no incre.ised buildings, but only means 

 to receive and support in a long-tried establish- 

 ment an increased number of the poor and 

 destitute. 



During the recent epidemic 170 cases of 

 Asiatic cholera were admitted, and 104 of the 

 number were restored to health and their 

 families. 3496 cases of choleraic diarrhoea were 

 also received, and, through prompt attention, 

 the further progress of disease was prevented. 

 The Committee earnestly APPEAL to the be- 

 nevolent for AID, and trust that the extent 

 and value of the medical and surgical relief 

 afforded to the poor from all parts may cause 

 assistance to be given to the funds of this, the 

 oldest metropolitan Hospital supported by vo- 

 limtary contributions. 



Donations and Subscriptions arj thankfully 

 received by Messrs. Hoare & Co., 37. Kleet 

 Street ; by Messrs. Bou verie & Co., 1 1 . Hay- 

 market ; by tlie Joint Treasurers, the Hon. 

 Philip P. Bouverie and Peter R. Hoare, Esa. ; 

 or by the Secretary. 



F. J. WILSON, Sec. 



rri 



Just published. New and Cheaper Edition, 

 price Is. ; or by Post for 13 stamps. 



IHE SCIENCE OF LIFE ; or, 



_L How to Live and What to Live for ; 

 with ample Rules for Diet, Regimen, and Self- 

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London : PIPER, BROTHERS & CO., 23. Pa- 

 ternoster Row i HANNAY, 63. Oxford 

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A CATHOLIC HISTORY OF ENGLAJTD. 



The Anglo-Saxon Period. Complete in Three 

 Volumes. 



This Day is published, price ^Ss., the Third and 

 Concluding Volume of 



\ CATHOLIC HISTORY OF 



J\_ ENGLAND. By WILLIAM BER- 

 NARD MAC CASE. 



" In days like these, when so many of our 

 new books are but old ones newly dressed up, 

 a work of original research, and for which the 

 materials have been accumulated by the 

 writer with great labour and diligence, de- 

 serves especial commendation. Of such a cha- 

 racter is the ' Catholic History of England ; 

 its Rulers, Clergy, and Poor, before the Re- 

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 which the third volume, extending from the 

 reign of Edward the Martyr to the Norman 

 Conquest, has just been published. The vo- 

 lumes bear evidence in every page that they 

 arc, as the author describes them, ' the results 

 of the writing and research of many hours — 

 the only hours for many years that I had to 

 spare from other and harder toils.' Himself a 

 zealous and sincere follower of the ' ancient 

 faith,' Mr. MacCabe's views of the characters 

 and events of which he is treating naturally 

 assume the colouring of his own mind ; many, 

 therefore,, will dissent from them. None of 

 his readers will, however, dissent from bestow- 

 ing upon his work the praise of ^eing carefully 

 compiled and most originally written. None 

 will deny the charm with which Mr. MacCabe 

 has invested his ' History,' by his admirable 

 mode of making the old monkish writers tell 

 their own story." — Ifotes and Queries. 



"Mr. MacCabe's mode of composition is as 

 novel as his plan. Sacrificing ordinary lite- 

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 whole centuries of observation and narrative, 

 and in fact revives those dead monks and 

 scribes till they write his book. The plan is 

 not only new, but it was necessary, as the 

 reader will find if he compare the garbled and 

 inaccurate version given by Hume and some 

 other writers, with the original statements of 

 the same events incorporated in these pages. 

 He will also be better able to understand, when 

 this universality of authorities is explained, 

 why this book sliould be called a ' Catholic 

 History.' The work is of great literary value." 

 — Times. 



" It treats the Anglo-Saxon period under a 

 phase quite ditterent fom that in which it is 

 viewed by Lingard in his Anglo-Saxon Anti- 

 quities. Lingard describes the doctrine and 

 doctrinal practice of the age ; llie Catholic 

 History tells the story of its inner life. Each, 

 therefore, may be regarded as the complement 

 of the other. Both are indispensable to every 

 English lustorical collection." — /Ju&Zjrt Ite- 

 view. 



T. C. NEWBY, Publisher, 30. Welbeck Street, 

 Cavendish Square. 



Now ready. Fifth Edition, price Is. cloth. 

 (Postage Free.) 



A WORD TO THE WISE; 

 or Hints on the Current Improprieties 

 of Expression in Writing and Speaking. By 

 PARRY G WYNNE. 



" All who wish to mind their p's and o'», 

 should consult this little volume." — Gentle- 

 man's Magazine. 



GRANT & GRIFFITH, Corner of St. Paul's 

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Just published, with 4 Illustrations, price 

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PARABLES from NATURE. 

 By MRS. ALFFED GATTY, Author of 

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" Pretty little tales with allegorical truths of 

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London : BELL & DALDY, 186. Fleet Street. 



12mo., price 4s. 



npHE HAYMAKERS' HIS- 



X TORIES. Twelve Cantos, in Terza 

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" This is a scholarly little book, sweet as a 

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" Many a faithful miniature of healthy 

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London : BELL & DALDY, 186. Fleet Street. 



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L. PETIT : with numerous Illustrations from 

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A POETRY BOOK FOR 

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,N THE STUDY OF LAN- 

 GUAGE : An Exposition of Tooke's 

 Dfversions of Purley. By CHARLES RI- 

 CHARDSON, LI,. D.. Author of "A New 

 Dictionary of the English Language." 



" The judicious endeavour of a veteran phi- 

 lologist to extend the pliilosophical study of 

 language by popularising Home Tooke's ' Di- 

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 very judicious and compact recast, for the book 

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 London : BELL & DALDY, 186. Fleet Street, 



Printed by Thoma* Ci.ark Shaw, of No. 10. Stonefleld Street, in the Parish of St. Mary, Islington, at No. 5. New Street Square, In the Parish of 

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 City of L^ndoi, Publisher, at No. 18ft. Fleet Street aforesaid,- Satmday, August 11, 1855. 



