9. THE LATER FOUNDERS OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
[367] Joseph Leigh (sic) served at the sixty-fourth Feast (i.e., about 1675), and Thos. Goring at the sixty-seventh (1678). In the same List occurs the name of John Goring, probably a relative of Thomas Goring, at the forty-sixth Feast (1657).
[368] His name occurs in the list of Masters and Workmen Printers, as having served as Steward at the sixty-ninth Feast (1680).
[369] Mores’ Dissert., p. 13.
[371] The names of both occur among the stewards who had served office at the annual Brotherly Meetings of Masters and Workmen Printers; James Grover at the sixty-first Feast (1672), and Thomas Grover at the sixty-third (1674).
[375] “The Arabic (of the Polyglot) is Great Primer, in our (i.e., James’s) foundery; and it came from Mr. Grover” (Mores’ Dissert., p. 13; and again, p. 63). Mores, however, only mentions an imperfect set of Double Pica matrices in the summary of this foundry, whereas Andrews possessed a complete fount of Great Primer. A few odd punches of the Polyglot Arabic are still in existence.