Page:Notes and Queries - Series 2 - Volume 1.djvu/495

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NOTES AND QUERIES

2 nd S. N 25., JUKE 21. '56.]


NOTES AND QUERIES.


487


" The Papal Tyranny as it was exercised over England for some ages represented by Peter Du Moulin. 4to. Lond., 1674."

" A Keply to a Person of Honour, his pretended Answer to the Vindication of the Protestant Keligion in the point of Obedience to Sovereigns, and to the Book of Papal Tyranny. By Peter Du Moulin. 4to. 1675.

" The Catholic Cause, or the horrid Practice of Murder- ing Kings justified and commended by the Pope in a Speech to his Cardinals upon the barbarous Assassination of Henry III. of France, who was stabbed by Jaques Clement, a Dominican Fryar. 4to. Lond., 1678."

" The Grand Design of the Papists in the reign of our late Sovereign Charles I., and now carried on against his Present Majesty, his Government, and the Protestant Religion. 4to. 1678."

" Popery and Tyranny lording it over the Consciences, Lives, Liberties and Estates ^both of King and People. [By Sir Roger L'Estrange.] 4to. Lond., 1678."

" A Vindication of the Sincerity of the Protestant Re- ligion in the point of Obedience to Sovereigns. Opposed to the doctrine of Rebellion authorised and practised by the Pope and the Jesuits. In answer to a Jesuitical Libel, entitled, Philonax Anglicus. By Peter Du Mou- lin. The Fourth Edition, in which more light is given about the Horrible Popish Plot, whereby our late Sacred Sovereign Charles I. was murdered. 4to. Lond., 1679."

" A Letter from a Jesuit in Paris to his Correspondent in London. Shewing the most effectual way to ruin the Government and Protestant Religion. 4to. 1679."

"Truth and Honesty in plain English. Or a Brief Survey of those Libels and Pamphlets printed and pub- lished since the Dissolution of the last Parliament. To- gether with a ,Letter to the Reverend and Worthy Pas- tors of the Separate Congregations. By a True Lover of Monarchy and the Anglican Church. 4to. Lond., 1679."

" An Appeal from the Countiy to the City for the Pre- servation of his Majesties Person, Liberty, Property, and the Protestant Religion. 4to. 1679."

" An Exact Account of Romish Doctrine in the case of Conspiracy and Rebellion, by pregnant Observations collected out ,of the express Dogmatical Principles of Popish Priests and Jesuites. 4to. Lond., 1679."

(To be continued.)

Subjects from the " Specimen of the Proposed Index."

Clergy, benefit of. Keference, Somner, Antiq. of Cant, 485.

Jesuits, Institution of the Order of. Robert- son's Europe, iv. 141.

London Clergy. Macaulay's Hist, of England, i. 131.

Registers, Parochial, &c. Grimaldi, Orig. Gen. Hubback on Succession.


ILLUSTRATIONS OF MACATJLAY.

The Clan Macdonald and the Burghers of Inver~ ness (2 nd S. i. 328.) Either by misprint or mis- take, the extract from the Kirk Register of In- verness for May 19, 1689, is made to record a sermon from an impossible text, viz. the 14th verse of the 124-th Psalm ; there is no such verse in the Bible ! But, on referring to the original, it seems to me most probable that the text should be


given from the 1st to 4th verse, being a very suit- able subject for the thanksgiving of the Inverness burghers for their deliverance 1'rom the assault of " Coll of the Cows." , A. B. K.

Belmont.

Epigram on " Sorrel " (2 nd S. i. 467.) The following extract of a letter from Dr. Thomas Smith to Samuel Pepys, dated April 16, 1702, enables us to fix the date of the publication of the epigram on " Sorrel." He says :

"After the chagrin which the contents of this long tedious letter may cast you into, I have, to divert you, and to restore you to your natural good humour, enclosed a paper containing an epitaph upon the late high and mighty Dutch hero, as also some few heroic lines upon Sorrell, which, after a single reading, I presume you will throw into the fire."

After reading this, one is inclined to suspect that Dr. Smith was the author of the lines. ,1 have consulted the Post-Soy and other papers of 1702, but cannot find the epigram in print.

A Query touching Sorrel. It is stated by Miss Strickland (Queens of England, vol. viii. p. 120., edit. 1854), that the following lines were sup- pressed by Pope, and only appear in the editions after his death :

" Angels, who watched the guardian oak so well, How chanced ve slept when luckless Sorrel fell."

J. Y.


Dialogue between Whig and Tory. " Interrogatories ; or, a Dialogue between Whig and Tory.

Whig. What is term'd Pop'ry ? Tory. To Depose a

King.

W. What's true Presbitery? T. To Act the thing. W. What's our best way to thorough Reformation? T. By Lies and Fables to embroil the Nation. W. Of Sin, What's greatest? T. Perjury. W,

What then ?

Of Perjurie's the worst? T. By hired Men. W. What hired Perjury doth God most Abhorr? T. That which Religion feign's pretences for. W. When doth this crime portend a Kingdom's

Fall?

T. When countenanc'd 'tis Epidemical. W. What follow's from degrading a Successor ? T. A Right of next Dethroning a Possessor. W. When shall free Subjects be no more opprest? T. When once they know what 'tis they'd have

redrest.

W. When shall sweet Concord our lost Peace repair ? T. When Covenant agrees with Common Prayer. W. When shall th' afflicted Brethren cease to groan ? T. When Eighty Two returns to Forty One.

,'s the most Inj ur d thing ?


W. Of all Mankind, what : T. 'Tis a French Subject, or King).


(God save the


"London, 1681." No. 2701. of the Collection of Proclamations, 8fc., presented to the Chetham Library, Man- chester, by James 0. Halliwell, Esq., F.R.S.

BlBLIOTHECAR. CHETHAM.