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THE HERALDS AND OFFICERS OF ARMS
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side with a rose, a thistle, or a harp, respectively for the English, Scottish, and Irish officers of arms.

A great deal of confusion has arisen between the costume and the functions of a Herald and a Trumpeter, though the confusion has been confined to the minds of the uninitiated and the theatrical stage. The

Fig. 17.—A State Trumpeter. (Temp. Hen. VIII.)
Fig. 17.—A State Trumpeter. (Temp. Hen. VIII.)

Fig. 17.—A State Trumpeter. (Temp. Hen. VIII.)

whole subject was very amusingly dealt with in the Genealogical Magazine in an article by Mr. G. Ambrose Lee, Bluemantle, and the illustrations which he gives of the relative dresses of the Heralds and the Trumpeters at different periods (see Figs. 16-19) are interesting. Briefly, the matter can be summed up in the statement that there never was a Trumpeter who made a proclamation, or wore a tabard, and there never was a Herald who blew a trumpet. The Trumpeters nearly