e Wickliffite Bible lately published by the University of Oxford,
the words are, "swoot of thi cheer _or face_," and in some MSS. "cheer
_ether bodi_."]
_Anecdotes of Old Times_ (Vol. iii., p. 143.).--A friend of mine has
furnished me with the following particulars, which may, perhaps, be
interesting to A. A.
When the aunt of my friend married and began housekeeping, there were only
two tea-kettles besides her own in the town of Knighton, Radnorshire. The
clergyman of the parish forbad the use of tea in his family; but his sister
kept a small tea service in the drawer of the table by which she sat at
work in the afternoon, and secretly made herself a cup of tea at four
o'clock, gently closing the drawer if she heard her brother approach. This
clergyman's daughter died, at an advanced age, in 1850.
My friend's mother (who was born a year or two before the battle of
Culloden), having occasion to visit London while living at Ludlow, went by
the waggon, at that time the only public conveyance on that road. A friend
of her's wished to place her daughter at a school in Worcester, and as she
kept no carriage, and was unable to ride on horseback, then the usual mode
of travelling, she _walked_ from her residence in Knighton to Ludlow, and
thence to Worcester, accompanied by her daughter, who rode at a gentle pace
beside her.
WEDSECNARF.
_Foreign English._--The following handbill is a specimen of German English,
and is stuck up among other notices in the inn at Rastadt:
"ADVICE OF AN HOTEL.
"The underwritten has the honour of informing the public that he has
made the acquisition of the hotel to the Savage, well situated in the
middle of this city. He shall endeavour to do all duties which
gentlemen travellers can justly expect; and invites them to please to
convince themselves of it by their kind lodgings at his house.
BASIL JR. SINGISEM.
Before the tenant of the Hotel to the Stork in this city."
BLOWEN.
_Britannicus._--I gather the following anecdote from the chapter "Paper
Wars of the Civil Wars" in Disraeli's _Quarrels of Authors_. Sir John
(Birkenhead) is the representative of the _Mercurius Aulicus_, the Court
Gazette; Needham, of a Parliamentary _Diurnal_.
"Sir John never condescends formally to reply to Needham, for which he
gives this singular reason: 'As for this libeller, we are still
resolved to take no notice, till we find him able to spell
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