Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 3.djvu/324

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318


NOTES AND QUERIES.


[12 S. III. MAY, 1917.


their editors, Mr. Norman MacColl and Mr. J. S. Cotton. He acted, I believe, for a short period as deputy for his friend Adolphus Trollope as Roman correspondent of The Standard. -He contributed also to other journals after his return to England, e.g., The Magazine of Art. Some years ago he made' a collection, in several folio volumes, of the chief of his articles and letters to the press, and offered it to the Bodleian Library, by which it was accepted, much to his satisfaction. I should think that it would form a storehouse of valuable miscellanea about men, places, and things Italian. Of all Italian towns, he spoke with peculiar enthusiasm of Siena. He was a true scholar in that he loved the learning which is its own reward. He loved society also, and had met a remarkable number of celebrities, his reminiscences of whom furnished material for many interesting obituary notices. He was a capital talker, with a caustic wit, very definite opinions, and a Johnsonian vigour of expression. Neither ill-health nor difficulties could quench his sturdy spirit.

" Lastly, it is fitting to mention his love of ' N. & Q.' In his later years especially, when the effort of lengthy composition was beyond his strength, he delighted in this journal and con- stantly spoke of it in his letters, for he was a man of varied knowledge and sympathies, apart from his special interest in Italy. One might say, without exaggeration, that ' N. & Q.' became his literary solace. A. W. VERITY."


to C0msp0n&flrts,


WE cannot undertake to answer queries privately, but we will forward advance proofs of answers received if sufficient stamps are sent to cover expenses ; nor can we advise correspondents as to the value of old books and other objects or as to the means of disposing of them.

MB. CUBZON YEO. Please send full address. Letters waiting to be forwarded.

B. C. C. W. " The little speedwell's darling blue." See Tennyson's ' In Memoriam,' Ixxxiii. st. 3.

ALDERMAN THOMAS HOYLE (12 S. iii. 91, 157).

PBOF. BENSLY writes : " In ' The Obituary of Richard Smyth,' Camden Society, 1849, is the entry, under Jan. 30, 1649 /50, ' Alderman Hoyle, of York, hanged himself.' "

WATCH HOUSES (12 S. ii. 9, 113, 157, 233, 315, 377, 538 ; iii. 233). R. B R writes : " In Mill Street, Bath, is a very pretty classical watch- man's sentry-box of stone, circular, with a domed top, of about mid-eighteenth-century date, the last of its kind in that city."

B. B. (' Pervigilium Veneris ' : " De tenente tota nox est perviglanda canticis "). This line, and " de tenente " in particular, has rather exer- cised the commentators. The oldest MS. appar- ently reads detenentettota (with a superfluous t). " Decinent," " detinent," " detument," have been conjectured ; but there seems no reason to quarrel with Salmasius's interpretation, who upholds the MS. reading and says " de tenente"

uno tenore, continue*. Prof. Mackail translates it " unceasingly."


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