Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 8.djvu/405

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i2S.viii.AEBiL23.i92i.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 331 SMALLEST PIG OF A LITTER. Has a HABEWAY, ENGLEFIELD, BERKS. In complete list of the names for the smallest vol. i. (1889) of the Journal of the Berks pig in a litter been compiled with the locality Archaeological Society, on pp. 80 and 136, in which each name is used ? I have the reference is made to a road called " Hare- following : Cad (Essex) Harry-Pig (Aber- way." It is said to be so called in a " ter- cleenshire) Crink (Breconshire), also Runt rier, temp. Edw. VI." I should much like and Rickling of uncertain locality. to know more about this road, and should MEDINEWS. be very grateful if any reader could tell me SONG WANTED, Can any reader inform where the terrier is to be found now. A me where I can get the words of the old fuller extract from it is desirable, in order Irish song 'Brian O'Lynn had no breeches that the course of the " Hareway," which is to wear ' ? W. G. ELLIOT. of great historical importance, may be precisely located. ROSE GORDON : < CHILD E ARCHIE'S PILGRIM- On p. 44 of the same volume is a reference AGE.' This was the name of a satire in to a map of 1770 of the country 10 miles Byronic stanzas by R[ose] Gordon, published round Padworth, Berks, and of four others, in 1873. Was " Archie " a real person ? unspecified. Are these large-scale manu- Rose Gordon published two other satires script estate maps, and, if so, where are ' M.P.s ' in 18^76 and ' The Past and Present ' they to be found now ? M. O. G. in 1879. Who was she ? J. M. BULLOCH. " SCOTCH HANDS. The wooden spatulas, 37, Bedford Square. W.C.I. ribbed on one side, used by butter -makers

  • THE GOLDEN MANUAL.' The Rev. John in handling and making-up biitter are now

Gordon, of the Birmingham Oratorv, is said ! generally known as " Scotch Hands." How to. have " compiled ' The Golden Manual '." & d thls name for them originate, and when ? What was it ? I cannot find it in the I have recently examined a large number of British Museum. J. M. BULLOCH. agricultural publications issued between 37, Bedford Square, W.C.I. 1821 and 1855 and have not found a single instance where these " implements " were ^ ARCHBISHOP TILLOTSON AND THE LAST called " Scotch Hands." SACRAMENTS. It appears from ' Clothed R. HEDGER WALLACE. in Cedar,' an article in the January number of The Cornhiil, that Queen Mary, ife of King " THE MILK OF PARADISE. " What is William III., was ministered to on her death- " th e Milk of Paradise " in the last line of bed by Archbishop Tillotsoii, and that pre- Coleridge's ' Kubla Khan : ? sumably from him " she 1 received the Last T. HENDERSON. Sacraments." Could that be the case in Mapumulo, Natal. ST. SWITHIN. HE ^^ NEVEB SET THE RESIDENCE or MRS. FITZHERBERT. The * IBE - ~ Thls expression occurs in ' The question of the whereabouts of the residence Secret Woman,' by Eden Phillpotts, p. 23. in Brighton of the good, clever and beautiful y ol jJ d an ^ reader tel1 me lf 1S common Mrs. Fitzherbert has never been finally ; m Devon or an y other county ?^ settled. The accepted storv is that she " ' GRANT. lived in a mansion on the 'south side of Ashfield, Cults, Aberdeen. Steine Lane, known as Steine House and , BEELEIGH ABBEY. I am desirous of vS n C r Upl y n f jS? * b nch l^ he obtaining a copy of ' The Present State of

.M.C.A. It is alleged that this tradition ' Beeleigh Abbey Essex ' bv G Draper 

j erroneou.s and that the actual house ! 4to> ffi& Can any reader help me ? stands on the opposite, or northern, side; j^ E THOMS of Steine Lane, the property of the Earl of | Beeleigh Abbev Maldon, Essei. Portarhngton, who inherited it and the Fitzherbert relics. It would appear that SCOTT FAMILY. In the Register of Sasines for the County of Fife, William Scott, both houses were owned by Mrs. Fitzherbert. Mr. W. H. W T ilkins, in his book, ' Mrs. Fitzherbert and George IV.,' has not made the place of her actual residence clear. JAMES SETON-ANDERSON. 39, Carlisle Road, Hove. Surgeon R.N., is seised, March 14, 1783, of Stewartsheath, Halheath or W T esterheath in that county. The record also mentions, in 1814, his sister Jean Hair, a Lieut. -CoJ. Martin Lindsay, 78th Regt. of Foot, and