g n e 
edition. She faw pndifturbed his remains brought 
back, and wrote on the occafion three leniences, in 
Greek, Latin, and Englifh, in her table-book, which 
tlie prefen ted as a memorial to the conftable of the 
Tower. Her turn foon followed. With a compofed 
countenance the proceeded to the fcaffold, where the 
made an addrefs to the by-ftanders, acknowledging her 
fault in not rejedting with fufficient fteadinefs the crown 
which was forced upon her, and exprefling her willing, 
net's to expiate her crime by death. She affifted her wo¬ 
man in adjufting her drefs, took leave of the attendants, 
and laying her head upon the block, received the fatal 
ttroke, Feb. 12, 1554. Hiftory does not record a more 
heroic end than that of this young woman of between fix- 
teen and feventeen. She was univerfally pitied, and 
■even bigotry has treated her memory with refpedt. 
GREY (Richard), a learned divine of the church of 
England, born in 1693. He was early entered of Lin¬ 
coln college, Oxford, where betook his degree of M.A. 
in 1718. The firft preferment which he obtained was 
the redtory of Kincote, in Leicefterfhi : re ; and after¬ 
wards he was appointed to the redtory of Hinton, in 
Northamptonfhire, and to a prebend in the cathedral- 
church of St. Paul. In 1730, he publiflied his Memoria 
Tecknica, or a new Method of artificial Memory, ap¬ 
plied to, and exemplified in, Chronology, Hiftory, Geo¬ 
graphy, Aftronomy ; alfojewifh, Grecian, and Roman 
Coins, Weights, and Meafures, &c. with Tables proper 
to the refpedtive Sciences, and memorial Lines adapted 
to each Table, 8vo. of which a fourth edition appeared 
in 1756. His method confifts in exprefling numbers by 
artificial words, and in making fuch a change in the end¬ 
ing of the name of a place, perfon, planet, coin, 8 cc. with¬ 
out altering the beginning of it, as fhall readily fuggeft 
the thing fought, at the fame time that the beginning of 
the word, being preferved, lhall bealeadingor prompting 
fyllable to the ending of it fo changed. It refledts great 
credit on the author’s ingenuity, and might certainly be 
rendered of ufe in hiftory and chronology. In the fame 
year he publilhed, A Syftem of Englifh Ecclefiafti- 
cal Law, extracted from the Codex Juris Ecclejiajlici An- 
gticani of the Right Rev. the Lord Bifhop of London, 
for the Ufe of young Students in the Univerfities, wiio 
are deftgned for Holy Orders, 8vo. For this work, the 
uni.verfity prefented’him with the degree of dodtor of 
divinity. In 1736 he publilhed a large anonymous 
pamphlet, entitled. The miferable and diftradted State 
©f Religion in England, upon the Downfall of the 
Church eftablilhed ; and in 1738, A New and Eafy Me¬ 
thod of learning Hebrew without Points ; to which is 
annexed, by Way of Praxis, the Book of Proverbs, di¬ 
vided according to.the Metre ; with the malforetical 
Readings in Roman Letters, &c. a grammatical Ana- 
lyfis, and Ihort Notes critical and explanatory, &c. 8vo. 
In the following year he publilhed, on a large Angle 
flieet, Tabula exhibens Paradigmata Verborum Hebraicorum re- 
gularium & irregularium, per omnes Gonjugationes, Modos, Tem- 
flora, & Perfonas, plenius & accuratius excufa ; and alio Hif- 
toria JoJepha Patriarchs, Literis tain Romanis quam Hebraicis 
excufa , cum Verfme Inter linear 1 S. Pagnini, & vccum Indice 
Analytico ; pramittitur nova Metkodus Hebraice Difcendi, dili- 
gentius rccognita, &c. 8vo. In 1742, Dr. Grey publilhed. 
Liber Jobi in Verjiculos Metrice divifus, cum Verfione Latina Al¬ 
berti Schultens, Nolifque ex ejus Commentaria excerptis, &c. Edi- 
dit, atque Annotationes fuas ad Metrum Pracipue Speclantes, 
adjecit R : G. &c. Accedit Canticum Moyfs, 'Dent. XXXII. cum 
Notis variorum, Svo. In the preface to this work fome 
ftridtures were introduced on particular paflages in 
Warburton’s Divine Legation; to which that gentle¬ 
man replied in his Remarks on feveral occaftonal Re¬ 
flections, &c. This reply called forth from Dr. Grey, 
in 1744, An Anfwer to Mr. Warburton’s Remarks on 
feveral occaftonal Reflections, fo far.as they concern the 
Preface to a late Edition of the Book of Job; in which 
G R I o S 
the Subjedl and Defign of that divine Poem are fet in a 
full and clear Light, and fome particular Paflages in it 
occafionally explained, &c. 8vo. In 1746 Dr. Grey 
occupied the poll of commiflary of archdeaconry of 
Leicefter. In 1749 lie publiflied, The laft Words of Da¬ 
vid, divided according to the Metre, with Notes criti¬ 
cal and explanatory, 4to. His laft publication, except¬ 
ing new editions of fome of his former pieces, was an 
Engliih tranflation of Mr. Hawkins Browne’s poem, De 
Animce Immortalitate, which appeared in 1753. Befides 
the articles enumerated above, Dr. Grey printed fome 
Angle Sermons, preached on public occafions. He died 
in 1771, in the feventy-eigbth year of his age. 
GREY-FLY, f See Oestrus. 
GREY'HOUND, f [gpigjnmb, Saxon.] A tall 
fleet dog that chafes by fight : 
The impatient greyhound, Ihipt from far. 
Bounds o’er the glebe to catch the fearful hare. Dryden. 
GREY'LACH, a town of Germany, in the duchy of 
Carniola : eight miles north of Rudolphlwert. 
GREY'S AN, a town of Silefia, in the principality of 
Neille ; eight miles fouth-eaft of Neifte. 
GREZ-EN BOUE'P-E, a town of France, in the de¬ 
partment of the Mayenne, and chief place of a canton, 
in the diftridt of Chateaugontier : two leagues and a 
halt eall-north-eaft of Chateaugontier, and five fouth- 
eaft of Laval. 
GRE'ZELS, a town of France, in the department of 
the Lot: two leagues and three quarters north of Mon- 
cuq, and three quarters fouth of Puy l’Eveque. 
GREZZA'NO, oiGrezzana, a fmall town in Ita¬ 
ly, on the road to Germany, twelve miles north of Ve¬ 
rona, and two from Breonio. This place deferves no¬ 
tice on account of the remarkable bridge of Beja, form¬ 
ed by nature, which connedts two hills with each other; 
its arch is fifty feet broad, and its utmoft height amounts 
to a hundred and fourteen Veronefe feet. 
GRI'AS, f. [It is the name of a plant in Apuleius, 
but the derivation is unknown.] In botany, a genus of 
the clafs polyandria, order monogynia, natural order of 
guttiferae, Juff. The generic characters are.—Calyx: 
perjanthium one-leafed, cup-fhaped ; mouth four-cleft, 
finally lacerated. Corolla: petals four, roundifh, con¬ 
cave, coriaceous. Stamina : filaments numerous, feta- 
cequs, longer than the corolla, inferred into the recep¬ 
tacle ; anthers roundifh. Piftillum: germ fomewhat 
deprefled, immerfed in the calyx ; ftyle none ; ftigma. 
thickifh, four-cornered, hollowed out crofs-wife. Peri- 
carpium : drupe large, one-celled, acuminate at the 
bafe and tip. Seed: nucleus fcored with eight fur¬ 
rows.— EJJ'ential Charabler. Corolla four-petalled ; calyx 
four-cleft ; ftigpia feflile, crofs-fhaped ; drupe with an 
eight-furrowed nucleus. 
Grias cauliflora, or anchovy pear. This is a tree, and 
frequently .grows to the height of fifty feet. Branches 
at the top, .fimple, fliort, or none. Leaves on fhort pe¬ 
tioles, pendulous, two ©r three feet long, wedge-lhaped 
at the bale, oblong-attenuated, entire, marked with 
nerves and veins, wrinkled, fmooth. Flowers from the 
Item, on very fliort, fcaly, many-flowered, peduncles ; 
corollas large, whitifh. The uprightnefs of the growth, . 
and the largenefs of- the leaves, give this tree a very ele¬ 
gant appearance. The fruit is about the fize of an alii- 
gator’s egg, and much like it in fliape, only a little 
more acute at one,end, and of a brown ruft’et colour. 
This beautiful tree is frequent in many parts of Jamai¬ 
ca, and grows generally in low moift bottoms, or fhal- 
low waters. The fruit is pickled in the Weil Indies, 
and eaten in the fame manner vvith. the Eaft-Indian 
mango, which it exactly refembles'in tafte. 
Propagation and Culture. Put the fto.iies into the. ground 
foon after the fruit is gathered, and keep the plants 
conftantly in the bark-bed in the ftove. In the Weft . 
Indies 
