NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[Nov. 3. 1855. 



Carriage Free, on remittance of a P. 0. Order. 



LONDON LABOUR AND 

 THE LONDON I'OOR. A Cyclopajdia 

 of the Social CoiidiDion and Earninas of those 

 that WILL, CANNOT, and WILL NOT Work. By 

 HENRV MAYHGW. With lUustrationg 

 from Special Dasuerreotypes by BEARD. 

 8 Vols., 21s. ; or, without the section relating 

 to Thoae Who Will Not Work in General. 

 Prostitutes in Particular. 16s. 



" We have already alluded to the sellers of 

 provisions ; for the other trades, the variety of 

 which is immense, we must refer the reader to 

 Mr. .Vlayhew's inteiesting volumes." ..." We 

 have placed Mr. Mayhew's volumes in our list, 

 because we have derived from them some use- 

 ful information j but the matter tliey contain 

 is curious and interesting enough to deserve a 

 more attentive examination than we can be- 

 stow upon them at present." — Extracts from 

 Quarterly Jievieio (New Number, 194.) 



G. NEWBOLD,304. & 310. Strand, London. 



Just published, in 1 "Vol., fcap. 8vo., with Por- 

 trait, price 3s. 



A TRUE ACCOUNT OF THE 

 LIFE AND DEATH OF SIB JOHN 



KING, KNT., Counsellor at Law to King 

 Charles II., Solicitor-General to James Duke 

 of York, and one of the Masters of the Bench 

 of the Society of the Inner Temple. Written 

 by his Father in 1677, and now first published 

 fi-om the Original MS. With Illustrative 

 Notes. 

 LoBdon : BELL & DALDT, 186. Fleet Street. 



Lately published. 



THE ANNALS OF ENGLAND. 

 An EPITOME of ENGLISH HISTORY, 

 from Cotemporary Writers, the Rolls of Par- 

 liament, and other Public Records. Vol. I., 

 fcap. 8yo., with Illustrations, cloth, is. 



" This is a book we like. It is not one to 

 read through, but one to study. It is not a 

 history, but a summary of history, based on 

 the statem»nts of the most nearly cotemporary 

 writers. The ante-Noi'hian era is the fullest, 

 considering the scanty nature of our docu- 

 ments, the writer bein^ justly of opinion that 

 the conquering race did not effect such great 

 changes as is generally supposed. Many 

 facts, hitherto little known, have been de- 

 rived from the Patent Rolls, the Rolls of 

 Parliament, and the Statutes of the Realm (an 

 invaluable well-spring of early English his- 

 tory) ; while, to meet a common deficiency, 

 brief biographies of eminent persons are occa- 

 sionally introduced." — .ilWos, May 19, 1855. 



" We have rarely met with a more highly 

 useful book for educational purposes than this 

 Epitome. It gives a brief, but comprehensive, 

 outline of all the great events which have 

 marked the character and habits of the British 

 people, and fixes the dates of such events with 

 accuracy and precision, in such a manner as to 

 fix them upon the pupil's memory, and to store 

 his mind with information that (innnot be too 

 highly prized. As a book of reference, it will 

 also be found valuable. We cannot but speak 

 in terms of the highest approbation of the 

 manner in which a most laborious undertak- 

 ing has been thus far fulfilled. The present 

 volume forms but the first portion, and brings 

 the history of England down to the end of the 

 reizn of Richard II. We shall look forward 

 to the publication of its completion with great 

 pleasure."— i)at7j/ News, June 4, 1855. 



Second Edition, with large map, price 5s., 

 cloth boards. 



Oxford and London : J. H. & JAS. PARKER. 



PRIZE ESSAY ON PORTU- 

 GAL. By JOSEPH JAMES FOR- 

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

 Paris, Berlin, &c.. 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 j " also of a projectfor 

 the Improvement of the navigation of that 

 river, and of various other works on Porttigal. 



JOHN WEAliE, 59. mjch Holbom. 



THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGA- 

 ZINE AND HISTORICAL REVIEW. 

 In an age which claims to give peculiar atten- 

 tion to whatever is useful and practical, the 

 Gentleman's Magazine has stepped forward to 

 occupy the vacant nost of an Historical Review. 

 In so doing, the Editors endeavour to present, 

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 acceptable in every house and family. Gen- 

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 the Magazine a worthy organ and representa- 

 tive of Historical and Archaeological literature. 

 In its Original Articles, historical questions are 

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 minent attention is given to all historical 

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 the Month contain a record of such recent 

 events as are worthy of being kept in remem- 

 brance ! and its Obituary is a faithful memo- 

 rial of all persons of eminence lately deceased. 



Recent alterations have rendered the Gen- 

 tleman's Magazine an interesting Miscellany, 

 in wh-ch are combined both popular and ster- 

 ling literature. It is peculiarly well suited not 

 only for general readers, but for circulation 

 amongst the Members of Book Societies, and 

 for the tables of Public Reading Rooms. _A 

 specimen Number will be sent, free, on receipt 

 of 2s. M. in postage stamps. 



In the New -Series this Magazine has em- 

 braced a larger circle of Literature than be- 

 fore, without withdrawing in any degree its 

 attention from English Antiquities. Its plan 

 enables every inquirer to communicate his re- 

 searches to the world ; and thus the earliest 

 intelligence is conveyed, queries are answered, 

 truth is elicited, and e"ch Number becomes a 

 circulating mediu n of literary, historical, and 

 archaeological information. The work also 

 comprises a Review of New Publications, 

 Literary and Antiquarian Intelligence, the 

 Reports of Learned Societies, an Historical 

 Chronicle of the most important events 

 abroad and at home ; Preferments, Births, 

 Marriages, and Deaths. 



THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGA- 

 ZINE AND HISTORICAL REVIEW for 

 NOVEMBER con»aina : — 1. Queens un- 

 qiieened : by Dr. Doran. 2. The Dutch Critics 

 of the 16th, 17th, and 18th Centuries. 3. Peter 

 d' Aubuss^n, Grand Master of St. John. 4. Maps 

 and Views of London in the 16th Century. 

 5. Bartholomew Christopher Fagan, an Irish 

 writer of French Comedy. 6. The Peerage of 

 Ireland : with lists of all the New Peers cre- 

 ated since the Union, all the Extinctions in 

 the Irish Peerage, all the " Promotion"," all 

 the Peers advanced to Peerages of the United 

 Kingdom, and all the Representative Peers 

 since the Union respectively. 7. A Plea for an 

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 in them. The cases of Birmingham, St. 

 Olaves, Southwark, Shrewsbury, and Dulwich. 

 With Correspondence of Sylvanus Urban ; 

 Notes of the Month ; Historical Reviews ; 

 Reports of Archaeological Societies : and Obi- 

 tuary, including Mi moirs of Lord Delamere, 

 the Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Adnir, Sir Andrew 

 Corbet, Admiral Sir Samuel Pym, Archdeacon 

 Brooks, Lewis W. Dillwyn, Esq., Mr. Feargus 

 O'Connor, Mr. Alderman Kelly, Henry Col- 

 burn Esq., &c. &c. Price 2s. 6rf. 



NICHOLS & SONS, 25. Parliament Street. 



Now ready, 



THE FERNS OF GREAT 

 BRITAIN: illustrated by JOHN E. 

 SOWERRY. The Descriptions, Synonyms, 

 Ac, by CHARLES JOHNSON, ESQ. In One 

 Volume, cloth boards, containing 49 Plates, 

 full coloured, 27s. ; partly coloured, 14s. 

 JOHN E. SOWERBY, 3. Mead Place, 

 Lambeth. 



Now ready. Part I. of 



THE FERN ALLIES; a Sup- 

 plement to "THE FERNS OF GREAT 

 BRITAIN," illustrated by Jotin E. Sowerby. 

 Descriptions by C. JOHNSON, ESQ. To be 

 completed in about Six Parts, full coloured, 

 at 3s. i partly coloured at Is. &d. per Part. 



JOHN E. SOWERBY, 3. Mead Place, 

 Lambeth. 



A CATHOLIC HISTORY OF ENGLAND 

 The Anglo-Saxon Period. Complete in Three 



Volumes. 



This Day is published, price l a«., the Third and 



Concluding Volume of 



A CATHOLIC HISTORY OP 



/jL ENGLAND. By WILLIAM BER- 

 NARD MAC CAGE. 



"In days like these, when so many of ouf 

 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 commen iation. Of such a cha- 

 racter is the ' Catholic History of England; 

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

 formation, as described by the Monkish His- 

 torians,' by William Bernard MacCabe ; of 

 which the th'rd volume, extending from the 

 reign of Edward the Martyr to the Normaa 

 Conquest, has just been published. The vo- 

 lumes bear evidence in every page that they 

 are, 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 wriiten. None 

 will deny the charm with which Mr. MacCube 

 has invested his ' History,' bj; his admirable 

 mode of making the old monkish writers tell 

 their own story." — Notes and Qiceries. 



"Mr. MacCabe's mode of co"iposition is as 

 novel Bs his plan. Sacrificing ordinary lite- 

 rary pride, he makes the old Monkish w iters 

 compose the narrative — his ingenuity being 

 displayed in tbe skill with which the passages, 

 translated directly from the original, with all 

 theirnatural vigour of language, are connected, 

 so as to produce an appearance «>f oneness of 

 design and continuity. He then fuses info oni 

 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 

 render 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 expluined, 

 why this book s^'ould be called a ' Catholic 

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

 — Times. 



" It treats the Anglo-Saxon period under a 

 phase quite difterent f. om that in which it is 

 viewed by I/ingard in his Anfflo- Saxon Anti- 

 quities. Lingard describes the doctrine and 

 doctrinal practice of the age ; the Catholic 

 History tells the story of its inner life. Each, 

 therefore, may be regarded as the complement 

 of the other. Both are indispensab'e to every 

 English historical collection."- Z>uiim lie- 

 view. 



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

 Cavendish Square. 



'rHE TIMES NEWSPAPER. 



1 —MR JAMES GILBERT, of 49. Pa- 

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