Dictionary of National Biography, 1904 errata/Volume 51




Dictionary of National Biography


ERRATA IN VOLUME LI


SCOFFIN—SHEARES

N.B.— f.e. stands for from end and l.l. for last line

Page Col. Line  
3 i 12 f.e. Scogan, Henry: for 1891 read 1821
5 i 21 Scarburgh, Sir Robert de: for Scorbrough read Scorborough
28 for Scorby read Scoreby
13 i 38 Scott, Alexander J.: for Jesus,' 1859 ; read Man' 1860;
15 i 15 Scott, Cuthbert: for (d. 1565) read (d. 1564)
ii 36-37 for some time in 1565. read on the feast of St. Denys (9 Oct.?) 1564 (Molanus, Hist. Lovaniensis) and was buried in the church of the Friars Minor.
20 ii 22 Scott, Sir George G.: for Hayley read Haley
22 i 19 f.e. for In 1879 read About 1870
ii 23 for prejudice against the read prejudice in favour of the
40 ii 16-15 f.e. Scott, Sir John: for Bleau. Scot . . . . the survey read Blaeu. Scot interested himself in the survey
14-12 f.e. for purchased his drawings . . . . getting them revised read Pont's drawings, after his death about 1614, were purchased by the crown. Scot, having caused them to be revised
4 f.e. for Bleauaniæ volumen sextum,' read Blaeuaniæ volumen quintum,'
3 f.e. omit as its real author
2 f.e. for Bleau read Blaeu
41 i 9 f.e. Scott, John (1639-1695) : after 1752, 8vo insert (the work was ultimately extended to 5 vols.)
46 ii 7-5 f.e. Scott, afterwards Scott-Waring, John (1747-1819): omit was Maria, . . . . The second,
47 i 1 for 1746 read 1745
13 after Faber [q. v.]. insert Waring's second wife was Maria, daughter and heiress of Jacob Hughes of Cashel.
62 ii 20 f.e. Scott, Michael (1789-1835): for Raymond Lodge read Raymond Hall
18-17 f.e. for It was probably written . . . . business. read Probably he there wrote most of the sketches which were worked up into the 'Log.'
16-15 f.e. for 1836, after Scott's death, read 1834, when it formed vol. liv. of a 'Collection of Ancient and Modern English Authors' in Baudry's 'European Library.'
67 ii 16 f.e. Scott, Thomas (1480?-1539): after Thomas insert Lord Petgormo
72 i 11 f.e. Scott, Thomas (d. 1660): for The name of the regicide's wife is not known. read The regicide was thrice married, first to Alice Allinson at Chesterford in 1626; secondly in 1644 to Grace, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Mauleverer (she was buried in Westminster Abbey, 26 Feb. 1645-6); and thirdly to Alice (of unknown surname), who petitioned to visit him before his execution (Noble, Regicides, ii. 197 ; Chester, Westminster Abbey, p. 140).
ii 20-26 omit and his wife Grace . . . . Registers, p. 140)
75 i 37 Scott, Thomas (1747-1821): for 18 Oct. read 16 Oct.

87 ii 27 Scott, Sir Walter (1771-1832): for 1809 read 1809-10
91 i 15 for (1816) read (1815)
92 i 6 for 1815 read 1816
101 ii 7 f.e. for Scott's children were: read Scott was succeeded in the baronetcy by his eldest son, Walter, who was born on 28 Oct. 1801, and died on 8 Feb. 1847, when the title became extinct. His other children were:
3-1 f.e. omit Walter, born . . . . no issue. (3)
102 i 1 for (4) read (8)
4 for Scott has now no descendants except read Scott is now lineally represented by the family of his great-granddaughter,
5-6 for daughter of Hope-Scott and her children. read now of Abbotsford; she is second daughter of J. R. Hope-Scott [q. v.] and wife of the Hon. Joseph Constable Maxwell (third son of William Maxwell, Lord Herries), who assumed the additional surname of Scott on his marriage.
103 ii 21 after printed) insert 1808
24 after 1813 insert (really 1812)
3 f.e. for 1849 read 1820 and after 1820 insert (really 1819)
104 i 3 for George III's read George IV's
19 after 1651,' insert 1826
112 i 28 Scott, William, Lord Stowell (1745-1836): for Colburne's read Colburn's
112 ii 30-31 Scott, William (1797-1848): for Knaveshire read Knavesmire
113 ii 12-11 f.e. Scott, William: for Parliament House read a tenement overlooking Parliament House Square
114 i 34-35 for Perthshire read Ayrshire
125 ii 3 f.e. Scriven, Edward: for 1318 read 1818
132 i 47-48 Scrope, Adrian: for thirty-seventh read twenty-seventh
135 i 38 Scrope, Sir Geoffrey: for Ufflete read Ufflete or Usflete
139 i 35-36 Scrope, Henry le, 3rd Baron Scrope of Masham: for A modern writer says read According to Monstrelet,
37 for but he gives no authority (Gesta read (ed. Panthéon Littéraire, p. 366; cf. Gesta
19-17 f.e. for wife from the royal family. Even . . . . and the prince read wife, Joan Holland, from the royal family, the lady's father being half-brother of the late King Richard II. When at the end of 1411 the prince
16-15 f.e. for Scrope continued at the treasury, read Scrope resigned the treasurership 16 Dec. 1411 (Wylie's Henry IV, iv. 51).
14-11 f.e. for His supersession by Henry V . . . . he was entrusted read After the accession of Henry V he was entrusted
ii 17-19 for Possibly he had resented . . . . two years before. read Rumour ascribed the conspiracy to bribery with French gold; if so, it is possible that Scrope was the go-between.
158 i 15 Scudamore, William E.: for survives with read died 7 June 1898, aged 82, leaving
158 i 14 f.e. Scudder, Henry: after Cambridge insert whence he graduated M.A. in 1606
159 ii 18 f.e. Seager, Charles: for Brecknor read Bicknor
184 ii 14 f.e. Sedgwick, Thomas: for Gainsford read Gainford
187 ii 7 Sedley, Sir Charles: for earl of Rivers read Earl Rivers
188 ii 6-5 f.e. Sedulius: for must be the commentator read must be differentiated from the commentator
199 ii 36 Segrave, Sir Hugh: for Brustwick read Burstwick
202 i 17 Segrave, John de: for Almondbury read Alkmundbury (Alconbury)
211 ii 8 f.e. Selby, Walford D.: for 1865 read 1867
226 ii 9 Sellar, William Y.: for his death in October 1890 read his death at Kenbank, Dalry, Galloway, on 12 Oct. 1890
28 after 1892. insert He also contributed 'Characteristics of Thucydides' to 'Oxford Essays,' 1857.
232 i 31 Selwyn, George A. (1809-1878): for Major Charles Selwyn read His father's uncle, Major Charles Selwyn
35 omit His father's uncle,
ii 6 for the first of a series read an early foundation in the series of colonial sees

7 omit in the colonies
3 f.e. for an only son, read two sons: William, vicar of Bromfield, and
233 ii 35 Selwyn, William (1806-1875): for (1806-1875) read (1809-1878)
235 ii 10-15 Sempill, Hew, 11th Lord Sempill: Note that the author of 'A Short Address . . . . of the Author,' London, 1793, was not by the subject of this article, but by his grandson, Hugh Sempill, thirteenth Lord Sempill (1758-1830).
248 ii 42 Senlis, Simon de, Earl of Northampton: for (d. 1170) read (d. 1159)
270 i 22 Seton, George, 5th Lord Seton: for ducesque alii, read aliique duces,
23 for Dominium read Dominus
281 ii 19-18 f.e. Seward, Anna: for Johnson, writing . . . . declared read Johnson remarked to Boswell, 25 June 1784, that
282 ii 13 Seward, Thomas: for may read may be
296 i 31 Seymour, Catherine, Countess of Hertford: for Catherine read Lady Catherine
297 i 5-7 for and she would probably . . . . for a revival read but all hope of her complete restoration was dispelled by a revival
32-38 for As a result . . . . lieutenant of the Tower. read On Grey's death, 21 Nov. 1564, the countess was transferred to the custody of Sir William Petre [q. v.] at Ingatestone, Essex. Afterwards she was handed over to the charge of Sir John Wentworth, and on his death to that of Sir Owen Hopton at Cockfield Hall. The fact that Hopton was subsequently lieutenant of the Tower has led to the erroneous assumption that the countess was confined there a second time.
304 i 25-34 Seymour, Edward, Duke of Somerset: for But he had lost faith . . . . collected a large army read At first he avoided all reference to the feudal claim which Henry VIII had revived in 1542, and sought to win over the Scots to the projected union with England by promising free trade between the two kingdoms, autonomy for Scotland, and the substitution of the words Great Britain for England and Scotland. France encouraged the Scots to resist, and during the summer the Protector collected a large army
18 f.e. for Dumbarton read Dunbar
305 ii 19 after dington insert (Sept. 1549)
26 for Ballemberg read Boulogneberg and after Newhaven insert (Ambleteuse)
20 f.e. after enclosures insert (June 1548)
19 f.e. after rejected insert in the following session of parliament
17 f.e. for May read May 1549
306 ii 32 for twenty-nine read thirty-one
308 ii 25-26 for She was divorced soon after 1530 read She is erroneously said to have been divorced
309 i 10-5 f.e. for Owing to the misconduct . . . . by his second wife read By an act of parliament passed in 1540 Somerset's estates were entailed upon his issue by his second wife in preference to his issue by his first, and similar clauses were introduced into the patents for his subsequent dignities and grants of land.
311 i 3-4 Seymour, Edward, Earl of Hertford (1539?-1621): for recommitted to the Tower. read committed to the custody of Sir John Mason [q. v.].
6-8 for he was released . . . . but was kept read but he was kept
10 after 158 insert cf. Notes and Queries, 8th series, vii. 422-8
318 i 30 Seymour, Francis, 1st Baron Seymour of Trowbridge: for is now an inn read was used as an inn until 1842, when it became Marlborough College
324 i 9 f.e. Seymour, Lord Hugh: for at Jamaica read while cruising for his health off Jamaica.
332 i 11-16 Seymour, Thomas, Baron Seymour of Sudeley: for Meanwhile, in the summer . . . . In August he was back read It was not Seymour, as Maclean states, but Clinton who was sent in command of the fleet against Scotland during the summer and autumn of 1548. Seymour remained at home, busy with his intrigues against his brother's authority. In August he was
333 i 14 for manuscripts read sources
335 i 26 Seymour, William, 2nd Duke of Somerset: for Lanesborough read Londesborough
345 i 9 Shairp, John C.: for October read November

355 i 21 Shakespeare, William: for Charles Howard read Charles, Lord Howard, of Effingham
ii 1 for The company, read At first the company performed at the Theatre, but they
359 i 33 for The quotation read The italicised quotation
360 ii 4 f.e. for 26 Feb. read 6 Feb.
361 ii 25 after their friends, insert Shakeapeare was not present; he was acting the same night before the queen at Greenwich.
363 i 19-1 f.e. for involved him . . . . Shakespeare avows read led to the production of his 'Sonnets.' Between 1591 and 1597 no aspirant to poetic fame in England failed to seek a patron's ear by a trial of skill as a sonneteer. Shakespeare applied himself to sonneteering when the fashion was at its height. Many critics are convinced that throughout the 'Sonnets' Shakespeare avows
ii 5-6 for Their uncontrolled ardour read But the two concluding sonnets (cliii. and cliv.) are directly based on an apologue illustrating the potency of love which figures in the Greek anthology (Palatine Anthology, ix. 627). Elsewhere many conceits are adapted from contemporary sonnets by English and foreign writers. Although Shakespeare's poems often seem coloured by personal experience, they were probably undertaken to a large extent as literary exercises. His ever-present dramatic instinct may be held to account for most of the illusion, which they create, of personal confession. Their style
364 i 24-45 for But when all allowance . . . . the twofold influence read No clear and connected story is deducible from the poems, which divide themselves into two main groups.
16-14 f.e. for the young man . . . . three years old (civ.) read for the most part a young man
9-8 f.e. for with an emphasis . . . . will perpetuate read in language originally borrowed from classical literature, but habitual to the sonneteers of the day, that his verse will perpetuate for ever
3 f.e. for his devotion read love
2-1 f.e. omit he has made . . . . in the
ii 1 omit the line
2 omit xl.-xlii.
6-8 for At one period . . . . by the young man read In one sequence the writer's equanimity is disturbed by the favour bestowed by a young patron
12 omit calmness and
14-22 for The second group . . . . to her seductions (cxxxiii.-cxxxvi.) read In the second group, most of which are addressed to a woman (cxxxvi.-clii.), Shakespeare, in accordance with a contemporary convention of sonneteers, narrates more or less connectedly the story of the disdainful rejection of a lover by a dark-complexioned siren. In one group of six sonnets (xl., xli., xlii., cxxxiii., cxxxiv., and cxliv.), which seem to stand apart from those that immediately precede or follow them, a more personal note appears to be struck. The six poems relate how the writer's mistress has corrupted his friend and drawn him from his 'side.' Sonnet cxliv., published by Jaggard in 1599, suggests the state of feeling generated by this episode. The poet declares that he is tempted by 'two spirits': 'a man right fair,' 'the better angel,' and a woman 'coloured ill,' 'the worser spirit.' The story of intrigue developed in these six sonnets, which is not readily paralleled, may owe its origin to a genuine experience of the poet.
25-26 for actors in the poet's narrative read persons to whom the poet seems to refer
29
37
for the young read a young
365 i 10 for would well apply read would (it is conuuuuly rtUggesttd) apply
17-20 for If there is no direct proof . . . . of Southampton, read But Chapman was only one among many of the protégés of Southampton, and another of them, Barnabe Barnes, has claims to be considered the 'rival poet.'
24 for mysterious read conventional
46-47 omit There was a contemporary musician called William Hughes
366 i 2 for Pembroke doubtless read Pembroke, who was known from birth until his father's death exclusively as 'Lord Herbert'

366 i 27-31 for But the intrigue . . . . in full tide, read But no historical justification is needed for the creation of that conventional personage, and one of the sonnets in which she figures was surreptitiously published by Jaggard in 1599, before the intrigue between Pembroke and Mary Pitton is known to have begun.
34 for William Herbert read Lord Herbert
13-12 f.e. for The emotional stories . . . . subsided quickly read The story of a lover's supersession by his friend in the favours of a mistress—the burden of those six sonnets that may have a personal significance—may possibly reflect an affair of gallantry in the poet's own life to which obscure reference would seem to be extant elsewhere. The adventure in that case would have caused no lasting wound
367 ii 28 for Eastcheap, which read Southwark;
29 after frequent insert the Boar's Head, Eastcheap
376 i 10 f.e. for 26 March read 24 March
380 i 33-34 for in 'Two Noble Kinsmen,' ed. Littledale, read by
37 for 1874). read 1874; 'Two Noble Kinsmen,' ed. Littledale).
383 ii 3 f.e. for impression read definite impression
386 ii 57-58 for the Grange read Denby Grange
388 i 10 f.e. after (both in 1600), insert 'Titus' (1600 and 1611),
6 f.e. omit 'Titus' (1600),
390 i 37 for Watkins read Watkiss
7 f.e. after Hudson insert first issued in 1851-6 (11 vols. 16mo), and reissued as
396 i 8 f.e. after plots, insert Alexander Schmidt's Shakespeare-Lexicon, 1874, and Abbott's Shakespearean Grammar, 1869 (new edit. 1897), elucidate the text.
400 ii 6 Sharp, Abraham: after Bradford insert and baptised in June 1653
7 for He was apprenticed read After attending Bradford Grammar School he was apprenticed to William Shaw, mercer, of York, and then
13 for From 1676 read From about 1684
27 after 1690). insert Early in 1691, however, he removed to Portsmouth to take a clerk's place in the king's shipyard.'
401 i 11 for 15 July read 18 July
13 after cited insert cf. Cudworth's Life and Correspondence of Abraham Sharp, 1889
438 i 32 Shaw, John (1559-1625): for 'Bibliorum read 'Biblii
36-40 for Shaw also wrote . . . . but it was translated read The work, which was in Latin, was translated
41-42 for posthumously . . . . 12mo. read London, 1623, 12mo, under the title 'A True Christian's Daily Delight'; this was reprinted in 1688 under the new title of 'The Divine Art of Memory.'
441 i 4 Shaw, John (1776-1832): for Ham Hall read Ilam Hall
450 ii 19-20 Shaw-Lefevre, Charles, Viscount Eversley: for St. Mary's, Winchester, read Winchester College
452 ii 17-19 Shaxton, Nicholas: for He became ultimately president . . . . sometimes called. read He was president of Physick's Hostel, which was attached to Gonville Hall, 1512-13.