"Τοῦ δὲ καθ' ἁῖμα ῥέεν καὶ σοὶ καὶ ἐμοὶ καὶ ἀδελφοῖς

Ἡμετέροις, αὐτοῦ σωζομένοις θανάτῳ."

In vol. iv. p. 240. it is stated that Twining applied to Pope's translation of Homer the Latin verse—

"Perfida, sed quamvis perfida, cara tamen."

L.

Cawley the Regicide.—Mr. Waylen, in his History of Marlborough, just published, shows that Cawley of Chichester, the regicide, has in Burke's Commoners been confounded with Cawley of Burderop, in Wiltshire; and he adds, "the fact that a son of the real regicide (the Rev. John Cawley) became a rector of the neighbouring parish of Didcot," &c. has helped to confound the families. May I ask what is the authority for stating that the Rev. J. Cawley was a son of the regicide?

C. T. R.


Minor Queries with Answers.

Dr. John Pocklington.—Can any of your correspondents oblige me with information respecting the family, or the armorial bearings of Dr. John Pocklington? He wrote Altare Christianum and Sunday no Sabbath. The parliament deprived him of his dignities A.D. 1640; and he died Nov. 14, 1642. Dr. Pocklington descended from Ralph Pocklington, who, with his brother Roger, followed Margaret of Anjou after the battle of Wakefield, A.D. 1460. He is said to have settled in the west, where he lived to have three sons. The family is mentioned in connexion with the county of York, as early as A.D. 1253.