Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 3.djvu/545

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s. in. jra 10, 1905.] NOTES AND QUERIES.


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its first tenant is thus partly styled a bright omen, one would say, for success in his venture.

"Robertson's Theatre" I would advance that as an altogether worthy, acceptable substitute for the present choice.

It is remarked also, with regret, how an intention would seem to prevail of dropping the well-known address Tottenham Street, in favour of Charlotte Street. (I find in the 'London Directory,' under the latter head, " Here is a new theatre.") Is not this unwise and inaccurate, with the familiar portico in its place, as of yore? The indication is scarcely a fact, topographically.

CECIL CLARKE.

Junior Athenaeum Club, VV.

"YEALLS": "BREWETTS." (See 10 th S. ii. 425, 533 ; iii. 371.) I have been unable to explain two more terms found in the house- hold book of Grace, Lady Mildmay, wife of Sir Anthony Mildmay. They are " Roasting Yealls " and " Brewetts 1 Sticke." Of course I know "brewett," or " brewis," as thickened soup, but you cannot very well have a "sticke" of soup. Would some contributor help me ? H. A. ST. J. M.

ACADEMY OF THE MUSES. Could you kindly give me^any account of the Academy of the Muses 1 I believe it was in existence a hundred years ago. The motto was, " Nil Invita Minerva." Is there any book about it? T. P. UTTON.

LOVE ALES. Amongst the Duchy of Lan- caster Court Rolls in the P.R O. (No. 52/640, temp. Eliz.) is this entry : " It'm q'd Rad'us Osbaston et Joh'es Scat'good fecer' love ales i'o in m'a uterq' vijs., :> i e., the two persons named were fined two shillings each for making " love ales." Can any one explain this ? Was it, perhaps, some kind of love philtre or potion? Of course, in these rolls it is common enough to find records of fines inflicted on A. B. and C. D. for that " being common brewers they have broken the assize " ; but this appears to be something different. BERNARD P. SCATTERGOOD.

Moorside, FarHeadingley, Leeds.

BURIAL-PLACES OF CELEBRITIES. Can any one who has access to more works of refer- ence than I have, tell me where the following were interred ?

1. Judges. The first Lord Monkswell, Sir Barnes Peacock, Sir Montagu Smith, Sir Henry Singer Keating, Lord Hobhouse, Sir Archibald Leoni Smith, Sir William Mil- bourne James, Sir George Mellish, Sir Richard Baggallay, Sir Richard Paul


Amphlett, Sir Alfred Henry Thesiger, Sir Robert Lush, the first Lord Ludlow (Sir H. C. Lopes), Vice-Chancellor Sir Charles Hall, Sir William Robert Grove, Sir Charles James Watkin Williams.

2. Associates of Royal Academy. Philip Richard Morris, John Brett, and Matthew Ridley Corbett.

3. Engineers. John Frederick Bateman, William Henry Barlow, Sir John Coode, Harrison Hayter.

4. Scientists. Sir R. H. Inglis, Rev. Thomas Rodney Robertson, William Hopkins, Hum- phrey Lloyd, Lord Wrottesley, Rev. Robert Willis, John Phillips, William Benjamin Car- penter, Sir John Hawkshaw, Allen Thomson, Sir John William Dawson.

5. Bishops. Charles Thomas Baring (Dur- ham), Rowley Hill (Sodor and Man).

6. Deans. Llewellyn Llewellyn ( St. David's), Augustus Page Saunders (Peter- borough). R- B. M. Bonnor (St. Asaph), James Vincent Vincent (Bangor), Edward Bickersteth (Lichfield), Henry Lynch Blosse (Llandaff), James Allen (St. David's), George Henry Connor (Windsor), Marsham Argles (Peterborough).

7. Colonial Bishops. William Walrond Jackson (Antigua), William Garden Cowie (Auckland), Henry Brougham Bousfield (Pre- toria), Edward Sullivan (Algoma), Herbert Bree (Barbadoes), W. T. T. Webber (Bris- bane), Bransby Lewis Key (St. John's), Henry James Matthew (Lahore), John Wale Hicks (Bloemfontein), William Chalmers (Goul- burn), Charles James Branch (Antigua), Chauncey Maples (Likoma).

Please reply direct.

T. CANN HUGHES, M.A., F.S.A.

Lancaster.

" THERE SHALL NO TEMPESTS BLOW." I find the following in a speech delivered in 1838, and wish to know whence it comes. There shall no tempests blow, No scorching noontide heat ; There shall be no more snow.

No weary wandering feet. So we lift our trusting eyes

From the hills our fathers trod, To the quiet of the skies, To the Sabbath of our God.

W. B. H.

INDIAN KINGS. Would MR. JAMES PLATT kindly oblige with a translation of the names of the four Indian kings whose visit to this country in the eighteenth century is men- tioned in both The Tatler and The Spectator? They were Tee Yee Keen Ho Ga Prow and Sa Ga Yean Qua Prah Ton, of the Naquas ; Elow Oh Kaorn and Oh Nee Yeabh Ton No