380
NOTES AND QUERIES. [io< s. i. MAY 7, 190*.
of mystery. ' Mr. James Baker writes eulogistici 11
Concerning R. D. Blackmore. Mrs. B. A. Crackan
thorp is earnest in advancing 'A Plea for
Reformed Theatre.' One of her demands is th
abolition without compensation of the " Financ
Syndicate." One of the pleasantest articles in th<
Nineteenth Century is that of Mr. R. Bosworth Smith
upon 'Bird Life at Bingham's Melcombe.' Thr
writer is an observant naturalist, and what he ha
to say concerning rooks, magpies, kingfishers, &c.
is of supreme interest. Sir George Arthur writes
earnestly and ably on ' Anti-Clericalism in France
and England,' and draws some striking contrasts
Sir M. E. Grant Duff points out noteworthy
things in ' Lord Acton's Letters.' It is interesting
to find Mr. Hugh Arthur Scott writing ' Against a
Subsidized Opera.' Sir Michael Foster has an
important article on ' The State and Scientific
Research,' and Sir William Broadbent a second
on ' Dr. Maclagan and his Great Work.' In the
Pall Mall, the cover of which presents the
piping of Pan, we are given, under ' Literary Geo
graphy,' 'The Country of George Meredith,' which,
as it happens, is Box Hill, that of his residence. It is
conceded that Meredith has in his works no special
atmosphere such as that of Blackmore. The views
are those of Surrey slopes and ridges. There is also
a portrait of the novelist. A very readable descrip-
tion, with illustrations, of ' Kilkenny Castle ' consti-
tutes an attractive feature. ' The Etiquette of
Visiting Cards 'copies many invitations from dis-
tinguished folk to John Wilson Croker, and is
fresh and suggestive. Mr. Andrew Lang's ' Captain
Pink' deals with an adventure in Jacobite times.
Mr. Max Beerbohm has much that is interesting to
say on 'Whistler's Writing.' Though it appeared
originally as a lecture, Canon Ainger's 'How I
traced Charles Lamb in Hertfordshire,' in the
'Cornhill, is a model magazine article, and will
- be read with delight by lovers of Lamb. It
throws much light upon " Elia." No. IV. of TLady Broome's 'Colonial Memories' deals with Rodrigues, and is so far the most interesting. No. V. of Mr. Andrew Lang's 'Historic Mysteries' describes the curious case of Elizabeth Canning, whom, in common with Fielding, the writer regards as "a poor, honest, simple, innocent girl." Miss Betham - Edwards writes on ' French Brides and Bridegrooms.' To the Gentleman's Mr. John Stuart sends a good paper on 'Proverbs.' What is said about " It 's a far cry to Lochow " is unfami- liar. Should not "Lochow" be "Lochawe"? 'An Old Inventory' has antiquarian interest. In ' At the Sign of the Ship ' in Longman's Mr. Lang concerns himself principally with books, and discusses at some length Mr. Wilkins's ' Queen of Tears,' which he truly says is as good as a novel.
MICHAEL LLOYD FERRAR. MR. FRANCIS P.
MARCHANT writes: "The gentleman whose death
is mentioned in the following extract from the
Times of 26 April was an occasional contributor to
' N. & Q.' : ' Ferrar On 23 April, 1904, suddenly, at
Little Gidding, Baling, Michael Lloyd Ferrar,
ex-Scholar and B.A. of T.C.D., Indian Civil Service
(Retired), third son of the late Michael Lloyd
Ferrar, of Belfast, aged sixty-four. The funeral
will leave Little Gidding to-day (Tuesday), 26th.
at 2.30, for St. Matthew's Church, Baling Common,
for the service at 2.45.' I did not personally know
Mr. Ferrar, but he corresponded with me over an
article on the patriarch Job, to which he made
friendly allusion in ' N. & Q.' " [9 th S. vii. 190].'
The Times of 30 April has the following more comprehensive account: "A correspondent writes: The ranks of retired Indian Civil servants have lost a well-known and much esteemed member in the person of Mr. Michael Lloyd Ferrar, who died suddenly at his residence, Little Gidding, Baling on the 23rd inst., at the age of sixty-four. Mr. Ferrar, who was a native of the North of Ireland and an ex-Scholar and graduate of Trinity College Dublin, entered the Indian Civil Service in 1863! and was appointed to Bengal. After two years' service in that province he was transferred to Oudh, where he remained for nearly twenty years distinguishing himself by carrying through the revenue settlement of the Sitapur district. Some time after the amalgamation of Oudh with the North- Western Provinces, Mr. Ferrar was trans- ferred to the latter, where in 1891 he became the first Commissioner of the Gorakhpur Division. He held this high office until his retirement in 1896, and during his tenure of it was called upon to display courage and judgment in dealing with the 'cow-killing' disturbances in 1893. The Commis- sioner's presence at Azamgarh gave the needful support to the youthful and inexperienced local officers, and the three European officials who had to face the crisis were able to report, after a few anxious days, that the danger was past. Mr. Ferrar, who was a member of the family of Nicholas Ferrar, the well-known seventeenth- century divine, was a man of exceptionally amiable disposition, popular among both Europeans and natives. He was especially beloved by the native gentry, as he belonged to that school of officials whose sympathies are given most actively to the aristocratic classes. But to all classes he was kind, ust, and generous."
Ijtoiitta 10 C0ms0:ttal8
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