Qad §, No 24,, June 14. 56.) 
NOTES AND QUERIES. 
481 
+ 
Fesan, Sanxay, Majendie, Mauduit, Ringli, Pillet, 
Chauvet, Papet, Perdrian, &c. J.S. Burn. 
Henley: 
Allhallows (1 §. xi. 148.) — F. G. C, is referred 
to the Index to the Parishes in the Population 
Tables, 1852, for the purpose of showing that in- 
stead of having been turned into “ All Saints,” 
there are thirteen churches in England still bear- 
ing the ancient name of Allhallows. May I add, 
that in the City of London are to be found eight 
parishes of this name, viz. Allhallows Barking ; 
Allhallows, Bread Street; Allhallows, Honey 
Lane; Allhallows, Lombard Street; Allhallows, 
London Wall; Allhallows Staning (Mark Lane) ; 
Allhallows the Great; Allhallows the Less. G 
Jos. G. 
Inner Temple. 
The Bible (2 S. i. 314. 877.) —I send you 
the following list of words collected from the 
writings of S. Cyril of Alexandria, which he uses 
for the Bible, which may serve as an appendix to 
the answer in “ N, .,” atid may help to show 
how unsettled their phrase was: that which 
comés first in order is the expression used by S. 
Paul in his Epistle to Timothy, to denote the Old 
Testament, where he says, “Thou from a child 
hast known the Holy Scriptures.” The third in 
my list I have met with in S. Athanasius, but my 
reading has not been extensive enough for any 
complete list : 
2 Ta tepa ypaupara, 
u y ay.a. ypahi, 
7 Beta ypap7. 
H OcdmvevaTos ypapy.” 
ai Gelar ypapai, 
All in S. Cyril of Alexandria. 0. Vv. Q. 
Motto for an Index (2™ §, i. 413.) —I beg to 
propose as a motto for Mr. J. Nurs# Cuapwicx’s 
index, the old Latin saying, “ Verbum sat.” ‘ 
Di L. 
Your correspondent requires a maxim or motto 
for an index. I fear with the readers of “N. & 
Q.,” as with its excellent editor, the following as 
a maxim will find no favour. 
(1) I (hf) never (d) did (e) ensure (x) ex;act- 
ness. F. Pai.orr. 
Stanton Prior. 
I beg to suggest as a motto for an index the 
following from Horace: “ Monstror digito preeter- 
euntium.” F.C. H. 
Paraph (2° S. i. 373. 420.) —The remark to 
which Este refers will be found in The Times of 
the 31st January last. In the letter of the Aus- 
trian (not of the French) correspondent, dated 
Vienna, Jan. 26., is the following : 
“ As you have already been informed, a kind of protocol 
of what had occurred was drawn up at St. Petersburg, 
and signed or ‘paraphed*’ by Count Nesselrode for 
Russia, and Count Valentine Usterhazy for Austria.” 
And there is this note: 
“* The meaning of the diplomatic expression ‘pa- 
raphed’ is, that the initials of the parties concerned are 
attached to a document.” 
Further on are the following passages, which will 
assist Q. in arriving at the exact force of the 
word : ’ 
“ Russia desires, 1st. That the preliminaries of peace be 
paraphed in this city by the representatives of the four 
Powers; and 2ndly, That they, the preliminaries, be 
signed in the capital of France.” 
“The British Cabinet is certainly morally bound to 
sign the preliminaries of peace as they now stand, al- 
though the Earl of Clarendon did not ‘paraph ’ the re- 
vised Austrian propositions as M. de Walewski did.” 
ARUN. 
The subject of paraphes, as used by notaries 
public in France and Spain, and indeed by all 
public men; has already been discussed, art. 
“ Notaries,’ in “N.& Q.,” 1% 8. x. 87. 315.; 
xil. 35. An example is given in the “ Repertory 
of Deeds and Documents relating to the Borough 
of Great Yarmouth.” Printed by order of the 
Town Council, 1855, prefixed to the Report of the 
Ancient Writings, by Henry Manship, Town 
Clerk, 1612. EK. S. Tayzor. 
Door-head Inscriptions (2°4 8. i, 379.) —On a 
cottage at Lockwitz, in Saxony (black letter) : 
“ Mit Gottes segen ist alles gelegen. &” 
(“With God’s blessing everything succeeds.””) 
Ruskin’s Stones of Venice (vol. iii; p. 210.) 
gives the following : — 
On the Casa Dario at Venice (no date) : 
“ Vrbis . Genio . Joannes . Darivs.” 
On the Casa Trevisan at Venice: 
* Soli | Honor. et 
Deo | Gloria.” 
On the Loredano Vendramin Palace, at 8. Mar- 
cuola (on the facade) : 
“ Non Nobis Domine.” 
C. D. Lamont. 
Strict Discipline formerly practised at Schools 
(24 §. i. 53. 131.) — The following quaint ac- 
count of Richard Muleaster’s method of teaching 
is rather curious, and may perhaps be worth pre- 
serving in your miscellany. Mulcaster wis edu- 
cated under the celebrated Ascham, whose severity 
he perhaps imbibed. He was the first master of 
Merchant Taylors’ School, and afterwards of St. 
Paul’s; the famous Bishop Andrewes was a pupil 
of his. He died April 15,1611. Accounts of him 
may be found in Knight’s Life of Colet, Strype’s 
Stow, Wilson’s History of Merchant Vaylors’ 
Schools, Gentleman’s Magazine, &c. &e. : 
“In the morning he would exactly construe and parse, 
which done, he slept his hour (custom made him critical 
to proportion it) in his desk in the school; but woe be 
