The following is an account of what the undermentioned churches cost building, the designs for which were furnished by Sir Christopher Wren :—

£s.d.
St. Paul's736,7522
Allhallows the Great5,64199
—— Bread-street3,34872
—— Lombard-street8,058156
St. Alban's, Wood-street3,16508
St. Anne and Agnes2,448010
St. Andrew's, Wardrobe7,0601611
—— Holborn9,00000
St. Antholin's5,685510¾
St. Austin's 3,145310
St. Benet, Grailchurch3,5839
—— Paul's Wharf3,3281810
—— Fink4,1291610
St. Bride's11,430511
St. Bartholomew's5,07711
Christ Church11,77896
St. Clement, Eastcheap4,3653
—— Danes8,78617
St. Dionis Back Church5,737108
St. Edmund the King5,207110
St. George, Botolph-lane4,509410
St. James, Garlick-hill5,3571210
—— Westminster8,50000
St. Lawrence, Jewry11,87219
St. Michael, Basinghall2,822171
—— Royal7,45579
St. Michael, Queenhithe4,35438
—— Wood-street2,554211
—— Crooked-lane4,641511
—— Cornhill4,686511
St. Martin, Ludgate5,378188
St. Matthew, Friday-str2,30182
St. Margaret Pattens4,986104
—— Lothbury5,34081
St. Mary, Abchurch4,9222
—— Magdalen4,29112
—— Somerset6,57918
—— at Hill3,980123
—— Aldermanbury5,23736
—— le Bow8,071181
—— le Steeple7,3888
St. Magnus, Lond. bridge9,5791910
St. Mildred, Bread-street3,70513
—— Poultry4,6549
St. Nicholas Cole Abbey5,042611
St. Olav, Jewry5,580410
St. Peter's, Cornhill5,64782
St. Swithin, Canon-street4,68746
St. Stephen, Wallbrook7,652138
—— Coleman-str4,020166
St. Vedast, Foster-lane1,853156

EARLY CLOCKS.

The first clock which appeared in Europe, was probably that which Eginhard (the secretary of Charlemagne), describes as sent to his royal master by Abdalla, King of Persia. "A horologe of brass, wonderfully constructed, for the course of the twelve hours, answered to the hourglass, with as many little brazen balls, which drop down on a sort of bells underneath, and sounded each other."—The Venetians had clocks in 872, and sent a specimen of them that year to Constantinople.

SINGULAR SPECIMEN OF ORTHOGRAPHY IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

The following letter was written by the Duchess of Norfolk to Cromwell, Earl of Essex. It exhibits a curious instance of the monstrous anomalies of our orthography in the infancy of our literature, when a spelling book was yet a precious thing:—

"My ffary gode lord,—her I sand you in tokyn hoff the neweyer, a glasse hoff Setyl set in Sellfer gyld, I pra you tak hit in wort. An hy wer babel het showlde be bater. I woll hit war wort a m crone."

Thus translated:—

"My very good lord,—Here I send you, in token of the new year, a glass of setyll set in silver gilt; I pray you take it in worth. An I were able it should be better. I would it were worth a thousand crown."

DEATH OF THE EARL OF KILDARE.