164 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[No. 146. 



CURIOUS NEWSPAPERS, 

 " all of the olden time," (from the Iwshi- 

 mng of CHARLES the SECOND'S REIGN 

 to that of GEORGE tlie THIRD) may be had 

 of MR. JAMES FENNELL, 1. Warwick 

 Court, Holborn, Ix>ndon, by forwarding a 

 Kemittauec for the prices here stated, viz. : 



Lot 1. The CiUi and Coimtri/ Xcws, Dec. 19, 

 1679 (givins very interestine information re- 

 specting Nell Gwyn, .lohn Dryden, the Duke 

 of Monmouth, and other celebrated charac- 

 ters) : the Lomlon Gazette, March, 1683 ; Mo- 

 mus Jiidens (a singular poetical newspaiwr), 

 1690; three numbers of the Athenian Mer- 

 cunj (on the i)lan of the present " Notes & 

 Queries "), 1692 ; and an original number of 

 Sir Richard Steele's Tatlcr, fol., very rare, 1?09. 

 This highly curious Lot, bs. 



Lot 2. Mercurius Domesticiis, 1679 ; London 

 Gazette, March, 16M ; Momiis Ridens (apoetical 

 newspaper), 1690 ; tlirec numbers of the Athe- 

 nian Mercuru, 1692 ; Joseph Addison's Specta- 

 tor, 1711, in the exceedingly lare original folio 

 form, very curious, only 5s. 



Lot 3. London Gazette, April, 1C83 ; three 

 numbers of the Athenian Mercury, 1692; an 

 original number of Addison's .S^pccta^or, 1711. 

 folio size, very rare ; three nuin'>er8 of The 

 World, 1753 ; Owen's Wetklii Chronicle, March, 

 1759; three numbers of the London Chronicle, 

 1762 ; the Public Lexlger, 1764 ; and the Even- 

 ing Post, June, 1 779t 5s. 



Lot 4. London Gazette, 1684 ; three numbers 

 of AtJwjiian Mercury, 1692 ; an original num- 

 ber of Steele's Tatter, 1709, very rare : three 

 numbers of the London Chronicle, 1762 ; Public 

 Ledger, 1764 ; Eceniny Post, 1779, 4«. 



Lot 5. Protestant Courant.May, 1682 ; Lon- 

 don Gazette, 1684 ; Mmnus Ridens, 1690; three 

 numbers of Atlienian Mercury, 1692 ; an ori- 

 ginal folio number of Addison's SiKctator, 

 J711 ! Pasquin, 1723 ; and the Public Ledger, 

 1761, is. 



N.B. Many other interesting ANCIENT 

 NEWSPAPERS maybe had of Mr. JAMES 

 FENNELL, whose valuable Collection (the 

 result of considerable research and expense) is 

 the most curious and extensive in the kingdom, 

 comprising numerous journals of the greatest 

 historical importance not to be found else- 

 where. The entire Collection commences with 

 the Reign of Charles I., and extends to the 

 close of the Reign of George IV. 



THE PRIMAEVAL ANTIQUITIES OF 

 ENGLAND ILLUSTRATED BY THOSE 

 OF DENMARK. 



THE PRIMEVAL ANTIQUI- 

 TIES OF DENMARK. By J. J. A 

 "WORSjVAE, Member of tlie Royal Society of 

 Antiquaries of Copenhagen. Translated and 

 applied to the illustration of similar Remains 

 in England, by WILLIAM J. THOMS.F.S.A. 

 Secretary of the Camden Society. With nu- 

 merous Woodcuts. 8vo. IDs. 6f/. 



" The best antiquarian handbook we have 

 ever met with— so clear is its arrangement, and 

 so well and so plainly is each subject illus- 

 trated by well-executed engravings. ... It is 

 the joint production of two men who have 

 already distinguished themselves as authors 

 and antiquaries." — Jfcir«!»3r Herald. 



" A book of remarkable interest and ability. 

 « . . Mr. Worsaac's book is in all ways a 

 valuable addition to our literature. . . . 

 Mr. Tlioms has executed the translation in 

 flowing and idiomatic English, and has ap- 

 pended many curious and interesting notes 

 and observations of his own."— Guardian. 



" The work, which wc desire to commend 

 to the attention of our readers, is signally in- 

 teresting to the British antiquary. Highly in- 

 teresting and important work."— Archwolo- 

 gicaljouriial. 



See also the Gentleman's Magazine for Feb- 

 ruary 1850. 



Oxford : JOHN HENRY PARKER, and 

 337. Strand, Loudon. 



In 4to. cloth, with 5 Slaps and 16 Plates, 

 price U. Is. 



CALEDONIA ROMANA; a 

 Descriptive Account of the Roman An- 

 tiquities of Scotland. By the late ROBERT 

 STUART. Second Edition, revised by DA'VID 

 THOMSON, M.A., Cambridge, Professor of 

 Natural Philosophy, King's College, .Aberdeen. 



SUTHERLAND & KNOX, Edinburgh, 

 Publishers to the Society of Antiquaries of 

 Scotland ; SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, & C J., 

 London. 



THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGA- 

 ZINE for AUGUST contains the follow- 

 ing articles : — 1. Louis-Philippe at Home. 

 2. Dr. Chalmers and the Free Church Disrup- 

 tion. 3. Pevensey Castle, by T. Wright, Esq., 

 F.S.A. (with Engravings.) 4. History of the 

 Koyal Mines Companv in 1720. 5. Godfrey 

 Wm. Leibnitz, Part II. 6. Conquerors and 

 Bondsmen. 7. James Logan of Pennsylvania 

 (with a Portrait). 8. Revived Manufacture of 

 Coloured Glass, by C. Winston, Esq. 9. Dis- 

 covery of the veritable Robin Hood. 10. The 

 Etymology of Bachelor. 11. Concealors, or 

 Informers of Lands concealed from the Crown. 

 12. Original Letter of Sir Isaac Newton. With 

 Notes of the Slonth. Reports of .\ntiquarian 

 Societies, Historical Chronicle, and OniTUAav, 

 including Memoirs of the late Mr. Clay, 

 William Scrope, Esq., Dr. Thackeray, Dr. T. 

 Thomson, F.R.S., John P. Vincent, Esq., 

 James Savage, Esq., &c. &c. Price 2s. 6d. 



NICHOLS & SON, 25. Parliament Street. 



XTATURE HER OWN 



_Ll PAINTER. —Tourists, Botanists, and 

 A.MATEPRs may obtain the most delicate 

 and perfect representations of Botanical Speci- 

 mens. Mosses, Ferns, Sea-weed, &c. in a few 

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 of the newly-invented HELIOGRAPH IC 

 PAPER. By its means a botanical or other 

 specimen, which would take a skilful artist 

 daj's of labour to copy, may be beautifully 

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 without injuring the original. An oak-leaf, 

 or the branchlets of a tea- weed, are copied with 

 the same ease. Packets of paper, with full in- 

 structions, sent to all parts of the kingdom on 

 the receipt of a Post-office Order for 6s., ad- 

 dressed to MARK CALOT, Post-office, Ken- 

 ni icton Cross, near London, and made payable 

 at the same place. 



Foolscap 8vo., 10s. 6d, 



THE CALENDAR OF THE 

 ANGLICAN CHURCH; illustrated 

 with Brief Accounts of the Saints who have 

 Churches dedicated in their Names, orw'iose 

 Images are most frequently met with in Eng- 

 land ; also the Early Christian and Mediaeval 

 Symbols, and an Index of Emblems. 



" It is perhaps hardly necessary to observe, 

 that this work is of an Archajoloarical, and not 

 a Theological character. The Editor has not 

 considered it his business to examine into the 

 truth or falsehood of the legends of which he 

 nirrates the substance ; he gives them merely 

 as legends, and, in general, so much of them 

 only as is necessary to explain why particular 

 emblems were used with a particular Saint, or 

 why Churches in a given locality are named 

 after this or that Saint." — Preface. 



" The latter part of the book, on the early 

 Christian and mediaeval symbols, and on eccle- 

 siastical emblems, is of great historical and 

 architectural value. A copious Index of em- 

 blems is added, as well as a general Index to 

 the volume with its numerous illustrations. 

 The work is an important contribution to 

 English Archicology, esixjcially in the depart- 

 ment of ecclesiastical iconography."— ii'fcrarj/ 

 Garelte. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

 377. Strand, London. 



Just published, foolscap 8vo., price 5s. in cloth. 



SYMPATHIES of the CONTI- 

 NENT, or PROPOSALS for a NEW 

 REFOR.MATION. By .JOHN BAPTI -T 

 VON HIRSC1IER,D.D., Dean of the Metro- 

 politan Church of Freiburg, Breisgau, and Pro- 

 fessor of Theology in the Roman Catholic Uni- 

 versity of that City. Translated and edited 

 with Notes and Introduction by the Rev 

 ARTHUR CLEVELAND COXE, M. A. 

 Rector of St. John's Church, Hartford, Con- 

 necticut, U. S. 



"The following work will be found a noble 

 apology, for the position assumed by the Church 

 of England in the sixteenth century, and for the 

 practical reforms she then introduced into her 

 theology and worship. If the author is right, 

 then the chanses he so eloquently urges upon 

 the present attention of his brethren ought 

 to have been made three hundred years ago: 

 and the obstinate refusal of the Council of 

 Trent to make such reforms in conformity 

 with Scripture and Antiquity, throws the 

 whole burthen of the sin of scliism upon Rome, 

 and not upon our Reformers. The value of 

 such admissions must, of course, depend in a 

 great measure upon the learning, the character, 

 the position, and the influence of the author 

 from whom they proceed. The writer believes, 

 tliat questions as to these particulars can \>e 

 most satisfactorily answered." — Introduction 

 by Arthur Cleveland Coxe. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford, and 

 377. Strand, London. 



Foolscap 8vo. price 6s. 



THE PRACTICAL WORKING 

 of THE CHURCH OF SPAIN. By the 

 Rev. FREDERICK MEYRICK, M.A., Fel- 

 low of Trinity College, Oxford. 



" Pleasant meadows, happy peasants, all holy 

 monks, all holy priests, holy every body. Such 

 charity and such unity, when every man was 

 a Catholic. I once believed in this Utopia my- 

 self, but when tested by stern facts, it all melts 

 away like dream." — A. Welby Pugin. 



" The revelations made by such writers as 

 Mr. Meyrick i i Spain and Mr. Gladstone in 

 Italy, have at least vindicated for the Church 

 of Enrland a providential and morally defined 

 position, mission, and purpose in the Catholic 

 Church." — Morning Chronicle. 



" Two valuable works ... to the truthful- 

 ness of which we are glad to add our own testi- 

 mony : one, and the most important, is 5Ir. 

 Merrick's ' Practical Working of the Churrh 

 of Spain.' This is the experience — and it is 

 the experience f^f every Spanish traveller— of a 

 thoughtful person, as to the lamentable resu'ts 

 of unchecked Romanism. Here is the solid 

 substantial fact. Spain is divided between 

 ultra-infidelity and what is so closely akin to 

 actual idolatry, that it can only be controver- 

 sially, not practically, distinguished from it : 

 and over all hangs a lurid cloud of systematic 

 imnioralitv, simply frightful to contemplate. 

 We can offer a direct, nnd even personal, testi- 

 mony to all that Mr. Meyrick has to say." — 

 Christian Remembrancer. 



" I wish to recommend it strongly."— T. A'. 

 Arnold's Theological Critic. 



" Many passing travellers have thrown more 

 or less fight upon the state of Romanism 

 and Christianity in Spain, according to their 

 objects and opportunities ; but we suspect these 

 'workings' are the fullest, the most natural, 

 and the most trustworthy, of anything that 

 has appeared upon the subject since the time 

 of Blanco White's Confessions."— Spectator. 



" This honest exposition of the practical 

 working of Romanism in Spain, of its every- 

 day effects, not its canons and theories.deserves 

 the careful study of all, who, unable to test tlie 

 question abroad, are dazzled by the distant 

 mirage with which the Vatican mocks many a 

 yearning soul thit thirsts after water-brooks 

 pure and full."— Literary Gazette. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER. Oxford, and 

 377. Strand, London. 



Printed by Thomas Ci.ark Shaw, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of Tx)ndon ; a-.d 

 publiBhed by Georok Bell, of No. 183. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstau in the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186. 

 Fleet Street aforesaid.— Saturday, August 14. 1852. 



