Notes and Queries, Number 166, January 1, 1853 / A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
We might, without any offence against truth or modesty, begin our Seventh Volume by congratulating ourselves and our Readers on the continued success and increasing circulation of our work. As to Truth, our Readers can only judge in part, and must take our word for the rest; but they may see enough in our pages to lead them to do so. Let them but look at the signatures which from time to time appear in our columns, and they will see enough to prove that we have the sanction of a list of names, high in literary reputation, such as it might seem ostentatious to parade in our columns on an occasion like the present. We abstain the more readily, because we have felt it our duty to do the thing so frequently and fully in our prospectuses. And as to Modesty, can there be any want of it in saying that with such—or perhaps we should say by such—contributors we have produced a work which the public has found acceptable? With such contributors, and others whom we should be proud to name with them, if they had given names which we cannot but know, but do not feel authorised to decypher—with such help, what sort of animal must an editor be who could fail to make a work worth reading? In fact, if not our highest praise, it is the plainest proof of the value of our publication, that we have done little or nothing except to give the reader the greatest possible quantity of matter in a legible form, wholly unassisted by graphic ornament or artistic decoration of any kind—without even the attraction of politics, scandal, or polemics.
Our pride is that we are useful; and that fact is proved by another to which it has given rise, namely, that we are favoured with many more contributions than we can possibly find room for; and therefore, instead of employing the occasion which offers for a few words with our Readers, by way of introduction to a new Volume, in any protracted remarks on what we have done, we would rather confer with them on the ways and means of doing more.
Various
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NOTES AND QUERIES:
A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
CONTENTS.
OUR SEVENTH VOLUME.
Notes.
PROCLAMATIONS OF THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES, AND THEIR VALUE AS HISTORICAL EVIDENCES.
CURIOSITIES OF ADVERTISING LITERATURE.
ON A PASSAGE IN "KING HENRY VIII.," ACT III. SC. 2.
NOTES ON BACON'S ESSAYS.
LATIN POEMS IN CONNEXION WITH WATERLOO.
SIR HENRY WOTTON AND MILTON.
FOLK LORE.
PASSAGE IN HAMLET.
VOLCANIC INFLUENCE ON THE WEATHER.
Minor Notes.
Queries.
EUSTACHE DE SAINT PIERRE.
DEVIZES, ORIGIN OF: A QUESTION FOR THE HERALDS.
Minor Queries.
Minor Queries with Answers.
Replies.
EMBLEMS.
MARRIAGES EN CHEMISE.—MANTELKINDER.—LEGITIMATION.
EDITIONS OF THE PRAYER-BOOK PRIOR TO 1662.
ETYMOLOGY OF PEARL.
"MARTIN DRUNK."
GÖTHE'S REPLY TO NICOLAI.
PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE.
Replies to Minor Queries.
Miscellaneous.
BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES
Notices to Correspondents.
WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE AND ANNUITY SOCIETY,
MURRAY'S