Page:Notes by the Way.djvu/79

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9

NOTES BY THE WAY.

interpose between the two sections. Others think that the preter tense is here used in the prophetic style, and that the passage should be rendered, The moon shall be split in sunder, for this they say is to happen at the Resurrection. The former opinion is supported by reading, according to some copies, 'wakad inshakka 'Ikamaro,' i.e., since the moon hath already been split in sunder; the splitting of the moon being reckoned by some to be one of the previous signs of the last day."


TENNYSON: KINGSLEY: DICKENS.

A correspondent of The Athenceum writes :

1894, Aug. 18.
Tennyson:
Kingsley:
Dickens.
"In 'A List of Papists and Recusants in the Shires of England 1587,' there appears, in Cornwall, one 'Mr. Tennyson' (Lansdowne MSS., British Museum). In the parish register of Newington, Oxfordshire, on the same page, in the same year, 1758, appear the names of a 'Kingsley' and of a 'Dickens.' "


"JINGO."

1894, Aug. 25.
"Jingo."
This word was added to the nomenclature of political literature by Mr. George Jacob Holyoake, in a letter of his which appeared in The Daily News of the 13th of March, 1878, with the head-line "The Jingoes in the Park" (see 'Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life '), thus making use of the "By Jingo" in the music-hall ditty popular at the time.


"NOYADE."

1894, Sept. 15.
"Noyade."
The following was in reply to a request made on the 18th of August by Mr. J. Lawrence-Hamilton, for references to the word "noyade," or killing by drowning as practised by Carrier during 1793 and 1794:-

The literature of Les Noyades would not be complete without reference to Swinburne's powerful poem 'Les Noyades,' in which occur the following lines:—

          In the wild fifth year of the change of things,
             When France was glorious and blood-red, fair
          With dust of battle and deaths of kings,
             A queen of men, with helmeted hair;
          Carrier came down to the Loire and slew,
             Till all the ways and the waves waxed red.

'Poems and Ballads,' John Camden Hotten, 1873.


GEORGE BENTLEY.

1895, June 8.
George
Bentley
With sorrow too deep for words we record the death of Mr. George Bentley. He had been in failing health for some time; but, having got through the severe winter, it was hoped that his life would have been prolonged; but on Wednesday, the 28th of May,