June 3. 1854.] 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



519 



perta est Hollandia, in stipendio proditioni imputato 

 agnoscit Hispania, in pluribus locis frustra et cum 

 ignominia tentatis praedicat Gallia, et nullam illi pras- 

 fecturam unquam integre credendo fatetur Flandria, 

 neque post tot in patriam suam molitiones, et praa- 

 sertim expeditionem quam ad fragorem pulverarias 

 conjurationis in nos habiturus erat, negare potest 

 Anglia." 



" Eadgarus in Jacobo redivivus : seu pietatis Angli- 

 canas defensio. Ab Adamo Reuter. Londini, 1614." 



" [Ejusdem] Libertatis Anglicanae defensio seu de- 

 monstratio: regnum Angliaenon esse feudum pontificis: 

 in nobilissima et antiquissima Oxoniensi academia, 

 publice apposita Martino Becano. Londini, 1613." 



" [Ejusdem] Oratio : quam Papam esse Bestiam 

 quae non est et tamen est, apud Johan. Apoc. xvii. 8. 

 in fine probantem .... recitavit Adam Reuter. Lon- 

 dini, 1610." 



" [Ejusdem] Contra conspiratorum consilia orationes 

 duae. Habitae .... 5° Aug. et 5° Nov., anno 1611, 

 diebus regiaj liberationis a conspiratione Govvrie, et 

 tormentaria. Londini, 1612." 



" Ejusdem, Delineatio consilii brevissima : quam 

 societati mercatorum Belgarum Londini florentiss. 

 commorantium consecrat A.R. Londini, 1614." 



" Uovrjais Xpiaro^ofiov tov AyyeXov, etc. At Oxford, 

 1617." 



" [The same]. Christopher Angell, who tasted of 

 many stripes and torments, inflicted by the Turkes for 

 the faith which he had in Christ Jesus. At Oxford, 

 1617." 



" [Ejusdem] Labor C. A. Graeci. De apostasia 

 ecclesiae, et de homine peccati scilicet Antichristo, etc. 

 Gr. et Lat. Londini, 1624."* 



" Expositio mysteriorum misse et verus modus rite 

 celebrandi. A Guilhelmo de Gouda. Daventrie, 

 1504." 



Had I not already occupied so much space, 

 I should have added an extract from Angell's 

 Epistle in commendation of England and the Inha- 

 bitants thereof. He begins thus : 



" O faire like man, thou most fertill and pleasant 

 countrie of England, which art the head of the world, 

 indued with those two faire eies, the two Universities." 



BlBLlOTHECAR. ChETHAM. 



Had your correspondent Novus, in his first 

 communication, specified by name the Consilium 

 Quorundam Episcoporum as the document whose 

 fictitious character he desired to notify, I should 

 not have been betrayed into my supererogatory 

 vindication of the Consilium Delectorum Cardina- 

 lium; the latter piece having lately been much 

 before me, and its very extraordinary frankness 

 in acknowledging the existence of the gravest 

 abuses, of which the Reformers complained, giving 

 it so much the air of satirical fiction. The use of 



* In the Bibliotheca GrenviUiana the tract De Apo- 

 stasia is not included, although the compilers say, " The 

 present is a complete Collection of his Tracts, including 

 the folding sheet." 



the other document, moreover, being chiefly in 

 the hands of a class of writers I am happy in not 

 being able to boast a very extensive acquaintance 

 with, recent anti-papal controversialists, I cer- 

 tainly did think that Novus had impugned the 

 authenticity of the genuine Consilium. 



R. G. is mistaken in supposing that I thought 

 there were nine Cardinals in the committee which 

 drew up the genuine Consilium, as the full title 

 of this piece will show : — Consilium novem Delec- 

 torum Cardinalium et aliorum Pradatorum, de 

 emendanda Ecclesia. B. B. Woodward. 



Bungay, Suffolk. 



LORD KOSEHILL. 



(Vol. ix., p. 422.) 



Something more than a partiality for the novelist 

 takes me now and then to the scene of the anti- 

 quary — Aberbrothock, or Arbroath. On one 

 occasion, in company with a few friends, we made 

 a day of it in a ramble along the romantic eastern 

 coast of that burgh, and the scene of the perilous 

 incident related of Sir Arthur Lekiss Wardour, 

 when rescued from the incoming tide by being 

 drawn up the face of the precipitous cliff by the 

 doughty Mucklebacket, under the superintendence 

 of Oldbuck and young Lovel. The fresh breeze 

 from the German Ocean, and the excitement of the 

 occasion, imparted a keen relish for the locality 

 and its associations ; and by the time we reached 

 the hostelry of Mrs. Walker, at Auchmithie, a no 

 less sharp appreciation of the piscatorial spread 

 we had the foresight to bespeak the previous day. 

 Ushered into Lucky Walker's best dining-room, 

 our attention was immediately drawn to an aristo- 

 cratic emblazonment of arms which occupied one 

 entire side of the room, with a ribbon, artistically 

 disposed over the same, upon which was inscribed 

 Lord Rosehill, who was, we were informed, the 

 eldest son of the Earl of Northesk (Carnegie), a 

 great proprietor in that neighbourhood, and the 

 special patron of our hostess and her establish- 

 ment. 



With respect to the particular Lord Rosehill, 

 alluded to by your correspondent W. D. R., I 

 beg to offer him the following brief notice from 

 Douglas' Peerage, by Wood, Edin. 1813 : 



" David L. Rosehill (son of Geo. 6th E. of Northesk) 

 was born at Edin., 5th April, 1749 ; had an Ensign's 

 commission in the 26th Reg. Foot in 1765; quitted 

 the army 1767, and went to America. He married in 

 Maryland, in Aug. 1768, Miss Mary Cheer, and died 

 without issue at Rouen, in Normandy, 19 Feb. 1788, 

 aet. 39." 



From a dear old lady, whom I always find a mine 

 of Forfarshire anecdote of the last century, I ob- 

 tain some corroborative proof that the said David 



