126
NOTES AND QUERIES. [12 s. iv. M*Y. i9is.
Office in the Town of St. Ives, having now been
carried on for more than Sixty Years." He
also had a circulating library, and was clerk to
the Board of Guardians. It was a continua-
tion of Croft's, whose earliest date I have
recorded is 1792.
Johnstone (George Frederick), bookseller, 1854- 1879. Post Office, The Pavement, hatter and stationer, 1854. The post office was removed to Bridge Street before 1877, when he adver- tised again in Kelly's ' Directory ' as a book- seller.
Parker (Henry George), printer, Bridge Street, Feb., 1886-1911. Parker celebrated the 25th year of his printing business and the 21st birth- day of his son Reginald George in February, 1911. The firm is now Parker & Son. Reginald George Parker is a second lieutenant in the Northumberland Fusiliers (1915).
Clarke (James G.), printer, The Broadway, 1888- 1911. Clarke left St. Ives for Vancouver, and was succeeded by R. W. Clenn, May 18, 1911.
HERBERT E. N ORRIS.
Cirencester.
(To be concluded.)
SIR WALTER SCOTT IN NORTH WALES:
AN EFFORT TO CORRECT LOCKHART. In
Lockhart's ' Life of Scott ' (I use A. & C.
Black's edition, 1896), chap. Ixiii., we read
of an excursion to Ireland made by Sir
Walter, with his daughter Anne and
Lockhart as companions, in 1825. The
account relates how they started from
Edinbxirgh on July 8, went from Glasgow to
Belfast, travelled over Ireland, " started for
Holyhead on the 18th of August," travelled
through North Wales, and up to the Lake
District, and were at Elleray, the beautiful
home of Prof. Wilson, " on the banks of
Windermere," by Aug. 24, as a letter,
quoted in the chapter, and bearing that date,
proves.
Lockhart says that " Sir Walter kept no diary during this excursion." Then he adds, " From my own [letters] to the ladies left at home, I could easily draw up a pretty exact journal of our proceedings." It must be kept in mind that Scott lived till Sept. 21, 1832, and that Lockhart's ' Life ' appeared in 1837-8. About ten years would have thus passed, since the occurrences connected with the Irish excursion, when Lockhart was compiling the ' Life.' He does not seem to have had any diary to guide him as to dates, but he evidently had access to the letters he himself had written, mostly, presumably, to his wife, as he went from place to place during the excursion.
We feel grateful to him for including such a long extract from one of these letters,
bearing on the passage of the party through;
North Wales, He says that the letter was
written " the following week," after they
had been through North Wales, and it is
dated " Elleray, August 24." The first
statement made in this extract is this :
" We slept on Wednesday evening at Capel
Carig, which Sir W. supposes to mean the-
Chapel of the Crags." There is something
wrong in one of the three statements as to
dates : they would not start for Holyhead
from Dublin on Aug. 18, sleep on a W T ednes-
day 'night at Capel Curig, and write on
Aug. 24 at Elleray. The Wednesdays of
these two weeks in August, 1825, were the
17th and the 24th respectively. They were
at Elleray on the latter Wednesday, Aug. 24.
If they started from Dublin on Aug. 18,.
that would be Thursday. Where then could
they get a " Wednesday evening " to sleep
at Capel Curig in North Wales ? My belief
is that the letter is more likely to be correct,
written as it was when the occurrences were
fresh in the author's mind, than his statement
that they started from Dublin on Aug. 18
a statement made about ten years after the
event, and probably a slip in calculation.
I believe they must have started from
Dublin on Tuesday, Aug. 16, perhaps on
Monday the loth, and slept at Capel Curig
over Wednesday night, the 17th, and pro-
ceeded to Llangollen on Thursday, the 18th.
I ought to point out that Sir Walter Scott
was greatly mistaken in supposing that
Capel Curig means a " Chapel of the Crags."
Lockhart has transcribed the name in-
correctly. It is not " Carig," as he has it,
but Curig, the proper name of a well-
authenticated saint. The place-name means
the Chapel of St. Curig.
T. LLECHID JONES.
DYEING YELLOW AND GREEN ON COTTON. The following letter was written to Grey- Cooper, Esq. (afterwards Sir), by one Dr. Richard Williams, dated Jan. 10, 1775, from New Inn, No. 8, and is of interest as revealing the name of the inventor of a method of dyeing yellows and greens on cottons :
" When I lay'd open my method of dying Yellows and Greens on Cottons to the Lords of the Treasury, Lord North gave me leave at any future day to present a Memorial to that Honour- able Board relative to the Culgee handkerchief fabric in Spitalfields, which I should have done last winter, but to prevent any objections being started to the carrying this business into execution on account of those Colours, Mr. Robinson advised me to defer it till they might be put in practice ; and that lieing now done, and their advantages ascertained by the inclosed letter and patterns