Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 6.djvu/279

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12 S. VI. MAY 22, 1920.] NOTES AND QUERIES.


227


trisyllable, pronounced Cor - yo - les. His ^authority, North's ' Plutarch,' used the same spelling. But in the Second Folio Shake speare, the word is always spelt Coriolus.

H. DAVEY. 89 Montpelier Road, Brighton.


"We must request correspondents desiring in- eormation on family matters of only private interest to alhx their names and addresses to their queries,

in order that answers may be sent to them direct.


CONGREVE'S DRAMATIC WORKS. In pre- paring my new edition of the Dramatic Works of William Congreve I find three .allusions which have until now baffled my 0-esearches, and I should be very grateful if

any reader could give me contemporary or

explanatory references. Mv paginal cita- tions are from the popular Mermaid Edition of Congreve, as being the most easily accessible.

' Love for Love,' Act II. (p. 225), Sir Samp- son Legend banteringly dubs Foresight the astrologer " Old Fircu." As this is in juxta- position to "old Ftolomee " ; "old Nostro- >damus " ; " old Merlin " ; Fircu is possibly the corrupted name of some astrological writer or legendary wizard, but I should be glad to have the exact reference.

T I** tor Love >' Aet m - (P- 244) Tattle says : I have more vizor-masks to inquire for me than ever went to see the Hermaphrodite or the Naked Prince." Doubtless two frequented shows -of the day. The Hermaphrodite has been traced, but I require some reference to the " Naked iPrmce.

'The Way of the World,' Act V. (p. 407). Mincing says : " You swore us to secrecy upon Messalinas poems," It is more than probable that the allusion is to a real book. I suggest that it was a clandestinely printed collection of loose verse. It does not, however, seem to be recorded, .and I have failed to find any further reference to " Messalina's poems."

' The Way of the World,' Act V. (p. 399) Mrs. Marwood says : "To have my young revellers of the remple take notes, like 'prentices at a con- venticle. It was the custom for " 'prentices " to take notes of the sermon at church in order that -they might retail the heads and substance of the discourse to their masters and mistresses. I had xsollected several references, but my notes on this .point are unfortunately lost. Would anv of your readers oblige me with pertinent passages? I 'believe that Sir Walter Scott has somewhere an .allusion to or a note on the custom.

MONTAGUE SUMMERS, M.A., F.R.S.L.

ST. JOHN'S HEAD ALTAR-SLABS. I believe 'these were portable. Can any one say why they were so called, and are any churches Known to retain them ? A. G. KEALY.


MOORFIELDS. In the eighth (1713) edition of that not uncommon work " The Whigs unmask'd Being the Secret History of the Calf's-Head-Club," &c., there is at p. 99 an allusion of some interest :

" The Whiggish Managers Prosecution of Doctor Sacheverel, provoking the Good People of England to shew their Resentments in pulling down th Meeting-Houses, upon the First of March, in the same year, we have thought fit, in memory of their notable Exploits, to introduce the preceeding Cut, being a lively Representation of the General Attack, which the enrag'd Rabble so successfully made upon Doctor Burgesses Theatre in Rogue- Lane, where the Gallows had the Honour to stand formerly, before Tyburn was erected."

The "Cut " is a full (demy 8vo) page plate representing a paved alley or lane opening into a large open space, divided by posts and rails. On the right a chapel and an adjoining house are being looted and wrecked by a mob. Some of the plunder is in the foreground and a figure having the initials A. P. on his back is bearing a wig and broad-brimed hat fed with boards


towards a bonfire being in the open area. The


If this is accurate the scene is one earliest illustrations available of


background is partly filled in with a line of trees behind a stone wall lined with spectators and a belfry stands on the extreme left. There is no title, but the text " Dr. Bxirgisses Theater " and a new moon is engraved above the trees.

There is, I suggest, presumptive evidence of this scene representing Moorfields, looking towards St. Giles's, Cripplegate the belfry, trees, and wall but I would like to have an authenticated identification. I have failed to identify Rogere's Alley, but am informed " Dr. Burgisses Theater " was in Ropemaker Street, of the

Moorfields, therefore of special interest in the fragmentary bibliography and icono- graphy of that famous locality.

ALECK ABRAHAMS.

DAVIDIANS : DAVID GEORGE'S SECT. In Strype's ' Cranmer ' at p. 291 Thomas Becon is quoted as alluding to the above in the reign of Edward VI. What is known of them or their founder ?

JOHN B. WAINEWRIGHT.

HARRIS, A SPANISH JESUIT. On May 3, 1788, Dr. James Beattie wrote to Sir William Forbes (Forbes's 'Life of Beattie,' Edin- burgh, 1806), vol ii. p. 228, mentioning " an extraordinary pamphlet " which had just appeared to prove the lawfulness of the slave-trade from the Scriptures, and writes :

" It is the work of a Spanish Jesuit of the name of Harris, who it seems is connected with the slave