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. One day, however, being more curious than prudent, he looked behind him; his workmen immediately disappeared, and Tom of Lindham was no more heard of. His road still remains in the state he left it." M. AISLABIE DENHAM. Piersebridge, near Darlington, Durham. _Theobald le Botiller_ (Vol. viii., p. 366.).--Theobald le Botiller was an infant at his father's death, 1206. He had livery in 1222; and in 9 Hen. III., {573} 1225, married Rohesia or Rose de Verdun, not _Vernon_. She was so great an heiress that she retained her own name, and her posterity also bore it. She founded the Abbey of Grace Dieu, Leicestershire, in 1239; and died 1247-8. Her husband died in 1230, leaving two sons: John de Verdun, who inherited, and Nicholas, who died in Ireland without issue; and one daughter Maud, who married John FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel. WALTER DEVEREUX. Hampton Court Palace. _Vault at Richmond, Yorkshire_ (Vol. viii., p. 388.).--Touching the "vault," or underground passage, "that goeth under the river" of Swale, from the Castle of Richmond to the priory of St. Martin, every tradition, _i. e._ as to its whereabouts, is, I believe, now wholly lost. Your Querist, however, who seems to feel an interest in that beautiful and romantic portion of the _north countrie_, will perhaps welcome the following mythe, which is connected, it is possible, with the identical _vault_ which is depictured by Speed in his _Plan of Richmond_. It was taken down from the lips of a great-grand-dame by one of her descendants, _both of whom are still living_, for the gratification of your present correspondent, who, like Luther, "Would not for any quantity of gold part with the wonderful tales which he has retained from his earliest childhood, or met with in his progress through life." But to my legend: Once upon a time a man, walking round Richmond Castle, was accosted by another, who took him into a _vennel_, or underground passage, below the castle; where he beheld a vast multitude of people lying as if they were sleeping. A _horn_ and a _sword_ were presented to him: the horn to blow, and the sword to draw; in order, as said his guide, to release them from their slumbers. And when he had drawn the sword half out, the sleepers began to move; which frightened him so much, that he put it back into the sheath: when instantly a voice exclaimed, "Potter! _Potter Thompson!_ If thou had either dr
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