500 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[No. 296. 



* Hanbury. A cross fleury» a demi-figure lost from the 



head, c. 1400. 



* Hanbury. A priest, small, c. 1440. 



SUFFOLK. 



* Bury, St. Edmunds. Man and wife are Jenkyn Smith 



and Marion. 



* Bury, St. Edmunds. John Fynches, 1497. 



* Beddington. Also Roger Ellenbridge, Esq., 143-. 



* Beddington. Philippa Carew and thirteen children, 



demi-figures, curious, 1414. 



* Beddington. Thomas and Isabella Carew, 1433. 



* Beddington. The cross is to Margaret Oliver, 1425. 



* Camberwell. All the brasses were destroyed or lost in 



the fire, February 7, 1841, except Anglicius Skj-nner, 

 ■which is much defaced, the inscription to John Scott. 



* Chobham, Female figure in shroud (I did not see it in 



1847). 



* Chobham. A group of fifteen children. 



* Croydon. Man in armour, of Heron family. 



* Lambeth. Man, is Thomas Clere, Esq., 1545. 

 Puttenham. 



* Eichmond. Mr. Robert Cotton, wife, and family (mural), 



e. 1580. 

 Shere. John Redford and wife. 

 Shere. Oliver Sandes, 1512. 



* Stoke D'Aubernon. Frances and Thomas Lyfield and 



daughter, with long genealogical inscription Cmural), 

 1592. 



SUSSEX. 



Clifton. Geo. Clifton, a youth, 1587. 



Lewes, St. Michael. Man, is — Warren, Esq. 



Willingden. Thomas Parker, Esq. (v.-ife gone), 1558. 



WALES. 



Llanrwst. Mary Moshin, bust in oval, 1653. 

 Llanrwst. Sir Owen Wynne, bust in oval, 1660. 

 Ruthin. Edward Goodman, Esq., 1560. 



WAEWICICSHIRE. 



* Charlcote. Also John Marskir, priest, with chalice, in 



alb and chasuble onlj^ c. 1530. 



* Exhall. John Walsingham, Esq., and wife, 1566. 

 t Solihull. 



* Sutton Coldfield. Not Barbara, lut Barbara Elliot, 1660. 

 Warwick, St. Maxj. Also Robert Willcordsey, priest, 



1424. 



* Weston-on-Avon. John Greville, Esq., in tabard, 1546. 



* Weston-on-Avon. Edward Greville, Esq., in tabard, 



1559. 



* Wixford. Priest (not seen in 1849). 



* Wixford. Rise Grifiyn, child (mural), 1597. 



■WILTSHIRE. 



* Berwick Bassett. Wm. Bayley, demi-figure, 1433. 



* Cliffe Pj'pard. A knight (probably a Cobham), c. 1380. 

 ISTewnton. John Erton, rector, 1503. 



■VVOECESTERSHIEE. 



* Fladbury. John Throkmorton, Esq., and lady (good) 



1445. 

 Shensham. Sir Robert Russell, c. 1405. 



* Yardley. Isabell Wheeler and two husbands, 1598. 



TOEKSHIEE. 



* Bolton-by-Bowland. Henry Pudsey, Esq. (in tabard), 



and wife, curious, 1509. 

 Marr. 



Owston. Robert Darfeld and wife, 1409. 

 t West Tanfield. Thomas Sutton, priest in cope, 13 — . 

 York, St. Michael. Chalice to William Langton, rector, 

 1463. 



I need hardly say, in concluding this long list 

 of additions and corrections to Mr. Manning's 

 excellent List (excellent as the first attempt in 

 a then comparatively new field of archeology), 

 that they are very much at the service of any one 

 who may wish to make use of them. I entered 

 them on the pages of my interleaved copy of the 

 List shortly after its publication in 1846, when I 

 paid some little attention to the subject, and col- 

 lected between 400 and 500 examples. 



W. Sparrow Simpson. 



LANCASHIRE. 



Eccleston Church, A priest in a cape (small). 

 Ormskirk. One of the Scarisbrick family. 



■WINAVICK. 



Sir Peter Leigh, of Lyme, and his wife. 

 One of tlie Gerard family. 



Akc 



ARCHBISHOP ABBOT, 1562 — 1633. 



The readers of Forster's Statesmen of the Com- 

 monwealth will remember the mention of "good, 

 easy Archbp. Abbot," in the life of Pym. The 

 notice of the primate is not quite respectful. In- 

 deed he is cited as a fair specimen of the clergy of 

 those days. His love of hunting is slyly excused, 

 on the same ground as the ordinary of Newgate 

 excused his drinking punch with Mr. Jonathan 

 Wild, " that liquor being nowhere mentioned in 

 Scripture." 



In spite of his runs with the hounds, I believe 

 that Abbot was something more than a mere 

 worldly priest. He did not scruple to oppose 

 Laud, and even rebuke him, when the conduct 

 of that divine seemed to him to savour of false 

 doctrine. 



But it is in his birth-place that Abbot has left 

 full proofs of his kind heart. In the town of Guild- 

 ford stands a hospital, spacious and well built, 

 where twelve poor "brothers" and "sisters" find a 

 home. There is little of the almshouse about it. 

 The rooms are large and richly carved ; and the 

 staircase is hung with quaint pictures. In the 

 chapel is the portrait of Abbot. The face ^ is 

 handsome, and betokens great sweetness of dis- 

 position, blended with firmness.* 



There is a strange tradition respecting Abbot. 

 Shortly before he was born, his mother dreamt 

 that if she could partake of a pike her child 



* Abbot's Hospital, like all other buildings, has its 

 mournful association. In the record room, over the gate- 

 way, the unhappj' Monmouth was confined, on his way 

 to London, after the battle of Sedgemoor. 



