2nd §. No 7., Fes. 16. '56.] 
NOTES AND QUERIES. 
141 
4433.), it is mentioned among the prints executed 
by Pierre Lombart, “engraver, born in Paris 
1613; died in the same city, 1682. From The 
Navorscher. J. Scorr, 
Norwich. 
John Locke (1* §. xi. 326, 3827.) —I have 
lately had occasion to make further inquiries re- 
specting the Locke family, and hasten to correct 
two mistakes which I have made as above. 
In p. 326. I stated that ‘“ Christopher, the se- 
eond son of Michael Locke, was buried at East 
Brent, co. Somersét, March 12, 1607.” This date 
applies to the interment of Christopher (one of the 
sons of the eldest son, Matthew), who died young 
and unmarried. 
In p. 327., after “Sir Peter King, the Chan- 
cellor, and Peter Stratton, were the children of 
the two sisters, who were, as I have shown,” the 
fvords “ first-cousins ” should have been used in- 
stead of “‘ nieces” of the philosopher. H.C.C. 
William Fillingham, Esq. (2° 8. i. 55; 56.) —In 
4 note on p. 91. of the fourth volume of Restituta, 
Mr. T. Park says that — 
“Mr. Fillingham was weil known to several persons 
of literary distinction, as an assiduous collector of choice 
books, as a liberal etiployer of them, and as a very 
amiable man. The copious Index to Warton’s History of 
English Poetry, was undertaken and completed by him. 
In the year 1805, his select library was publicly disposed 
of, before his departure to India; wherice, like too many 
of his lamented countrymen, he retirned to his native 
land no more!” 
OW Be Wa 
Somerset House. 
_ Romney Marsh (1* S. xii. 347.) — Mr. Gutr- 
’ BERT may be interested in knowing.that a copy 
(written in the fifteenth centuty) of the Ordi- 
nances of Justices Lodelow, Belknappe, and Cul- 
éper, in 1352 (of which a translation is printed 
in Dugdale’s History of Imbanking, p.31.), exists 
in Rawl. MS., A. 357., Bodleian Library. 
W.D. Macray. 
New College, 
Archbishop Law, of Glasgow (2° §, i. 56.) — 
LThave consulted the works of some of our best 
Glasgow hisforiaiis, but they are all extremely 
barren in genealogical particulars of this prelate 
and of his connections, On showing Mr. Lear's 
Note to the Warden of the Glasgow Cathedral 
(who is an intelligent and obliging gentleman), he 
thinks that in several points Mr. Lex is altogether 
on the wrong family, atid refers for accurate in- 
ormation, according to a memorandum given to 
im, as follows: 
“January, 1856. Visited the tomb of Archbishop Law, 
his descendant, James Law, W.S., of 44. Parliament Street, 
Westminster.” 
Archbishop Law's is now the only stone tomb 
in the cathedral. The hewn work of it is gene- 
rally in a good state of preservation; but the 
main inscription on the large tablet is nearly clean 
gone, which, however, has been printed by our 
historians. It rather closes up a window at the 
éast end of the chancel, and disfigures the latter, 
and for these causes Government proposed to re- 
move it; but it is now understood that it will 
remain, and the tablet inscription be renewed. 
From all accounts he was a very worthy and 
learned prelate, and ‘completed the leaden roof 
of the cathedral.” (Gibson’s Hist. of Glasgow, 
1777.) He died Nov. 12, 1632, and bequeathed 
the following legacies : 
“Ttem. I leave to the puir of Sanct Nicholas Hospitall, 
in Glasgow, foundit by the Archibischopis thairof, the 
sowme of ffyve hundrithe mks. (markis, 277. 15s. 6d. ster- 
ling), money of Scotland; and to the merchandis and 
erafts hospitallis thair, equallie to be devydit amangis 
them ffyve hundrithe mks. mofiey.” — Commissary Re- 
cords. 
G.N. 
Inscription Query (1% S. xi. 47.) — The piece of 
paper, something smaller than a visiting-card, on 
which was printed — 
-* Anno 173 
Capax est 
In Irschenberg.” 
and on which the cipher 4. has been added by the 
pen, may admit the following explanation: Ir- 
schenberg is probably Hirschberg, in_ Silesia, 
formerly a watering-place. See Vosgein, Diet. 
Geog. The form, and especially the filling up of 
the date with the pen, suggest the idea of common 
advertising cards. Let then Dr. Capax be. the 
watering-place physician, who yearly attended the 
health-seeking visitors, and the mysterious in- 
scription may simply mean : 
« Anno 1734 ‘ 
mie Capax is (arrived) 
n Hirschberg.” 
It is by no means essential to suppose this gen- 
tleman to have been a doctor ;.Capax is equally 
capable of performing the part of a banker, a 
fiddler, or a painter. J. 5. 
Joseph Adrien Le Bailly (1% S. v. 248.) — An 
account of “ Joseph Adrien Le Bailly Ecuier, 
Seigt D’Inghuem,” &c., is to be found in Recueil 
Héraldique, avec des Notices Généulogiques et Hise 
turiques sur un grand nombre de Familles nobles et 
patriciennes de la Ville et du Francourt de Bruges, 
par F. Van Dycke, 1851, p. 22. But M, Van 
Dycke makes no remark upon the singular in- 
scription which I have often noticed upon his 
very handsome tomb in the cathedral at Bruges. 
G. SreinMan STEINMAN, 
Old Nick (1% S. xii. 513.) — Among the many 
learned disquisitions on the name of the enemy of 
mankind, it may not be amiss to hear what the 
