OPINIONS OF THE PRESS-continued. 



" Its utility to scholars, artists, antiquarians, has conducted this 

 periodical to a stage of life when It may be said to have weathered the 

 danger of infancy. • • * The utility of the work, as a medium of inter- 

 communication, IS, of course, its first feature ; but its numbers also form 

 a collection of curious anecdote and gossip." — Spectator. 



" We have perused with intense interest every number of this 

 periodical as it has appeared. We have found that as it has proceeded 

 ft has increased in importance and in value ; and we have little doubt 

 that, continuing to be managed as it has been, and as carefully edited 

 as it is at present, it must become an established class-book in every 

 library." — Dublin Review. 



"Its (The Bank Note's) clever and cheaper contemporary." — 

 Dickens' Hottseholtl Words. 



" The work having been conducted with unflagging spirit, and, we 

 are happy to add, unfailing good taste, has already secured itself a 

 respectable place in public estimation. * » * We must now take leave 

 of our pleasant cotemporary, and, in doing so, cannot but express, as 

 members of the republic of letters, our grateful sense of his useful 

 and meritorious labours." — Chambers' Edinburgh Journal. 



•' The London Notes and Queries, a publication indispensable to 



the library of an historical inquirer, * • * ig kept up with great 

 freshness and spirit." — New York Literary World. 



" Notes and Querirs is become now an established institution, being 

 possessed of that great element of immortality, an individual character 

 and purpose. When a man, or a book, or a periodical, has no strictly 

 individual course, but is like fifty, or a hundred, or a thousand other 

 new hooks or periodicals, he or it may live and prosper doubtless, but 

 the time will also come when he or it must die. There may be three 

 score and ten years for a man, three score and ten months for a journal, 

 three score and ten weeks for a book ; but the time still comes soon 

 when each must go hence and be seen no more. Force of individual 

 character is the sal sapientum, the turner of base metal into gold, the 

 preserving salt that is alone able to save from decay whatever perishable 

 thing it touches. This Notes and Queries has ; and because it has 

 this, we may boldly predict that it shall be savoury in the mouths of 

 generations yet to come. Literary men, centuries after we are gone, 

 will be taking in their Notes and Queries : and the books that shall be 

 hereafter, will be made the richer for the odd and interesting and im- 

 portant Notes they furnish to the authors who contribute Qvbrieb for 

 the sake of getting them." — Examiner, 28th July, 1855. 



As only a few Sets of the First Series have been made up, early application for them is desirable, 



BELL and DALDY, No. 186. FLEET STREET, 



And by order of all Booksellers and Newsmen. 



New Series cominencmg January, 1856. 



" Learned, chatty, useful." — ^Athen^um, 



Every SATURDAY^ Foolscap Quarto, Price 4c?., or Stamped 5d. 



NOTES AND QUERIES : 



A MEDIUM OP INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ■ 

 ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, PHOTOGRAPHERS, &c. 



In compliance mtli a request m-ged upon us by many who, desirous of possessing Notes and Queries, were unwilling, 

 on the one hand, to incur the expense of purchasing the twelve volumes already issued, or, on the other, of having an 

 incomplete work, we determined, with the new year (1856), to commence a New Series of Notes and Queries. This 

 Second Series will be, in all respects, similar to the first, — carried on in the same spirit, — in a great measure, we trust, by the 

 same friendly hands. We feel, therefore, justified in hoping that, while this new arrangement will procure us new subscribers, 

 we shall not lose any of those whose patronage we have hitherto enjoyed. 



This beginning a New Series was further recommended to our minds by the consideration that, while Notes and 

 Queries is essentially a work of present interest, its greatest utility is as a work of reference. It seems, therefore, necessary to 

 the fall development of that usefulness, that the work should, from time to time, be divided into series, so that the Indices of all the 

 volumes of such series might be incorporated into one. . . x :■ 



By closing, therefore, our First Series with our Twelfth Volume, and by publishing an extensive Index to such twelve 

 volumes we believe we are not only carrying out the expressed wishes of many actual and would-be subscribers, but accom- 

 plishing! in an essential manner, one of the objects for which Notes and Queries was esUblished, namely, that of making 

 it a wefl- stored and available Common-place Book for all lovers of Literature. t „ ^ „. .r, ^ 



No 1. of New Series on Saturday, Jan. 5th, 1856, contained Articles by Messrs. Bruce, J. P. Colher, B. Corney, P. Cunningham, 

 J. H. Markland, S. W. Singer, Sir F. Madden, and other well-known writers. ^ .^ ^ , ^. -„„,„.„ 



No. 2. on Saturday, Jan. 12th, contained Original Documents, Letters, Broadsides, Proclamations, Ballads, &c., illustrative of 

 Macauiay's England. These Illustrations have been continued weekly. 



A, Specimen ITumber sent on receipt of five postage stamps. 



NOTES AND QUERIES 



is also issued in Monthly Parts, for the convenience of those who may either have a difficulty in procuring the unstamped Weekly 

 Numbers, or may prefer receiving it monthly ; and also in Half Yearly Volumes, each with very copious Index ; price 10s. 6d. 

 cloth boards. A few complete Sets of the First Series in 12 vols., price 6Z. 6s., may still be had. 



BELL and DALDY, No. 186. FLEET STREET, 



And by order of all Booksellers and Newsmen. 



