were written by Lovelace.

F. B. Relton. The Satyr on the Jesuits was written by John Oldham, and originally published in 1679.

Salopian. The tragedy of The Earl of Warwick or The King and Subject, was translated from the French of De la Harpe by Paul Heffernan.

Cam. It appears from Brayley's Londiniana, iv. 5. on the authority of Strype's Stow. b. i. p. 287., that Sir Baptist Hicks, afterwards Viscount Campden, was the son of Robert Hicks, a silk mercer, who kept a shop in Cheapside, at Soper's Lane End, at the White Bear. See also Cunningham's Handbook of London, Art. Hicks' Hall.

O. P. The lines—

"Had Cain been Scot, God would have chang'd his doom,

Not forc't him wander, but confin'd him home."

are from Cleveland's Rebell Scott, and would be found at p. 52 of Cleveland's Poems, ed. 1654.

H., who asks whether any friend living in London would consult books for him at the British Museum, and let him know the result, had better specify more particularly what is the information he requires.

Rusticus will find the information he seeks in a Biographical Dictionary under the name Sarpi.