ANAGRAMS.
| Fits creep on | Perfections. |
| All my ten i sent | Sentimentally. |
| Timon is least | Testimonials. |
| A mild bear | Admirable. |
| Our big hens | Neighbours. |
| Peters cable | Respectable. |
| Grin o ant | Ignorant. |
| I cant tell soon | Constellation. |
| Saint lucy heals it | Enthusiastically. |
| A minor in soup | Parsimonious. |
| On a trial | Variegated. |
| Tame nests | Statesman. |
W.G.C.
THE KING AT FOURTEEN.
With the present Number, price Twopence,
A SUPPLEMENT,
With a STEEL-PLATE PORTRAIT of His Present
Majesty,
WILLIAM IV.
AT FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE.
From a Picture by B. West, P.R.A.
Anecdotic Memoir; and Title-Page, Preface, and Index; completing VOL. XVIII.
Footnote 1: [(return)]
Gardeners' Magazine, Dec. 1831.
Footnote 2: [(return)]
His present Majesty, William IV.
Footnote 3: [(return)]
A current was experienced off these islands, setting S.S.W. at the rate of three miles an hour. The day previous to making the land, a strong current appeared to set from the N.W.
Footnote 4: [(return)]
Some Account of Shrewsbury, p. 128.
Footnote 5: [(return)]
See the Petition of the Inhabitants of Holm Cultram, in Cumberland, to Cromwell, praying for the preservation of the abbey church there A.D. 1538. Ellis's Original Letters, ii. 89.
Footnote 6: [(return)]
Spelman, Hist. and Fate of Sacrilege, p. 202. The extract is from a letter of John Bale to Leland.
Footnote 7: [(return)]
Homily on keeping clean of Churches.
Footnote 8: [(return)]
Strype's Cranmer, 177.
Footnote 9: [(return)]
Latimer's Sermons, i.60, 61.—Id. i. 176.
Footnote 10: [(return)]
Id. i. 167.
Footnote 11: [(return)]
Latimer's Sermons, i; 176, 220.
Footnote 12: [(return)]
Strype's Cranmer, 175.
Footnote 13: [(return)]
Fox, 1048. Percy's Reliques of English Poetry, ii 291. Shakspeare's Winter's Tale, act iv. sc. 2.
Footnote 14: [(return)]
Strype, Append, 88.
Footnote 15: [(return)]
Strype's Annals, pp. 239,240,241. Strype's Life of Grindal, pp. 11, 17, 22, fol., where will be found much information as to the manner in which Fox's book was composed.
Footnote 16: [(return)]
Compare p. 444 of the first edition (very scarce) with subsequent editions.
Footnote 17: [(return)]
This incident has been made the subject of much criticism to the disparagement of Fox. He, however, gives it as hearsay only, and, though the circumstantial details might not have been reported to him correctly, the substantial fact may be true nevertheless. Fox, too, was personally connected with the family of the Duke of Norfolk (at whose house the scene is said to have occurred), being once tutor in it.—Strype's Annals, pp 110, 368.
Footnote 18: [(return)]
Strype's Annals, p. 242.
Footnote 19: [(return)]
Fox, iii. 459.
Footnote 20: [(return)]
Three Conversions, ii. 215.
Footnote 21: [(return)]
Id. 230.
Footnote 22: [(return)]
Id. ii.81, and Strype's Annals, p. 240.
Footnote 23: [(return)]
Id. ii. 81, and Strype's Annals, p. 336.
Footnote 24: [(return)]
Id. iii. 23.
Footnote 25: [(return)]
We are aware that this rhyme is rather unusual; but we may parody the maxim of Sir Lucius—"When patriotism guides the pen, he must be a brute that would find fault with the rhyme."
Footnote 26: [(return)]
Sir Richard Birnie would never suffer imperial larking to go unpunished.
Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,) London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic; G.G. BENNIS. 55. Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and be all Newsmen and Booksellers.