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ounsel. "Somewhere about eighty," was as the reply. "How then do you remember the path for 100 years?" "I remember (said the old man firmly), when a boy, sitting on my father's knee, and he told me of a robbery that took place on that footpath; and so I know it existed _then_, for _my father never told a lie_." The point was carried, and the footpath remains open to this day, to tell to all generations _the beauty of truth_. SENEX. In Malcolm's _Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London during the eighteenth Century_, 4to. 1808, there is a "Summary of the Trial of Donald Maclane, on Tuesday last, at Guildford Assizes, for the murder of William Allen Jun. on the 10th of May last in St. George's Fields." Upon the trial mention was made of the paper stuck up against the walls of the King's Bench Prison, from which it appears that it contained the following: "Let * * * Judges, Ministers combine, And here great Wilkes and Liberty confine. Yet in each English heart secure their fame is In spite of crowded levies at St. J----'s. Then while in prison Envy dooms their stay, Here grateful Britons daily homage pay." The inscription upon the tomb of William Allen was visible in 1817, and in addition to the inscription on the north side, which has already been printed in "NOTES AND QUERIES" (Vol. ii., p. 333), was as follows:-- _South Side._ "O disembody'd soul! most rudely driven From this low orb (our sinful seat) to Heaven, While filial piety can please the ear, Thy name will still occur for ever dear: This very spot now humaniz'd shall crave From all a tear of pity on thy grave. O flow'r of flow'rs! which we shall see no more, No kind returning Spring can thee restore, Thy loss thy hapless countrymen deplore. _East Side._ "O earth! cover not thou my blood."--_Job._ xvi. 18. _West Side._ "Take away the wicked from before the King, and His throne shall be established in righteousness."--_Prov._ xxiii. 5. Fifteen months afterwards the father of William Allen presented a petition to his majesty for vengeance on the murderers of his son. O. SMITH. * * * * * REPLIES TO MINOR QUERIES _Osnaburg Bishopric_ (Vol. ii. p. 358.).--By the treaty of Osnaburg, in 1624, it was stipulated "that the alternate nomination to the Bishopric of Osnaburg should be in the catholic bishops, and in the protes
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