Nos facimus, Fortuna, Deam, cœloque locamus."
The alteration is evidently not a mere verbal one, but changes entirely the meaning and allusion of the passage.
J. S. Warden.
Rhymes on Places (Vol. v., pp. 293. 374. 500.).—In addition to the local rhymes given in your pages, I call to mind the following, not inserted in Grose. They are peculiar to the North of England:
"Rothbury for goats' milk,
And the Cheviots for mutton;
Cheswick for its cheese and bread,
And Tynemouth for a glutton."
"Harnham was headless, Bradford breadless,
And Shaftoe pick'd at the craw;