Imagens das páginas
PDF
ePub

CCCXXXV. THE DEAF MAN.

The following is from Strabo. A musician was playing in the market-place, when the market-bell began to ring, and the crowd moved away at the summons. One person however, who happened to be deaf, stayed behind, at which the Harper said he was highly honoured by this man's remaining when all the rest left him at the sound of the market-bell. "What?" said the deaf man, "has the market-bell rung? Nay then, I must gone too."

be

CCCXXXVI. Authorship of certain Articles in the Reviews.

Monthly Review, Copy which belonged to GRIFFITHS, the Editor.

1785. PARR wrote the Review of Cicero's Works

p.

56;

also of Dr Jos. White's Sermons; of Burton's Manilius; also,

1786. Sermon by Bp. Hurd, Headley's Poems, Edwards's Memorabilia.

1785. BURNEY wrote the Review of Glasse's Caractacus, the Glasgow-Eschylus, Euripidis Medea by Musgrave; 1786. Piozzi's Anecdotes, (Badcock reviewed the Tour to the Hebrides;) 1795. Wyttenbach's Plutarch; 1796. Porson's Eschylus; also, Gray's Elegy, and Marcus Musurus, perhaps in another Volume. 1793. PORSON reviewed Wyttenbach's edition of Plutarch de Liber. Educ. pp. 257–64; Dr Norbury's Translation of Gray's Elegy, 1793; also the Review of Ruggle's Ignoramus; and three Articles on the Parian Chronicle, one on the Dissertation by Dr Hewlett, and another on the Dissertation which stands before it.

1785. DR Jos. WHITE wrote the article on Hadley's Grammar of the Hindostanee Tongue.

1794. PARR wrote the Article on Bryant about Justin Martyr, in the British Critic; also, in the Monthly Rev. a notice.

1794. SHERIDAN's name is subscribed to pp. 89-97. 103 -8. 110-12. 202-12. 217-32. 313–21. 330 -41. 343-4. 345-9. 436-43. 449-60. 476— 80. 545-9; Vol. 2, 1794, p. 31-8. 83–95. 95 -107. 118-20. There are other articles by Sheridan, extending to 1796, all political, I think except what relates to Dallaway's Heraldry.

HUNTINGFORD'S Μετρικά τίνα Μονοστροφικὰ, reviewed in the Monthly Review June, 1783. p. 505-15. Oct.-154-61.

-Apology for the Monostrophics,

Monthly Rev. April, 1785. pp. 291–303.

[ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

1. Queen Elizabeth, going to visit Sir Nicholas Bacon said "My Lord, what a little house yours is!" "Nay, Madam," said Bacon, “it is your Majesty that has made my house too small for me."

2. Ferdinand, of Castile, asked one of his courtiers at whose house he was visiting, why he had not made a larger staircase. 'Nay, sir," said the courtier, "I did not expect so great a guest would ever have to go up it."

[ocr errors]

3. Philip II of Spain was driven by a storm to take refuge in a poor man's house. The man, who had been sadly distressed to provide accommodation for his guest, said to him when he departed: "I pray God to bless your Majesty and I hope, with his blessing, never to see your Majesty here again."

CCCXXXVIII. APPETITE.

A great eater, going to a dinner party, remarked to his entertainer that he had lost his appetite: "God be praised," said the Host, "I only hope none of the company has found it."

CCCXXXIX. DIOGENES.

Diogenes, the Cynic, begging (as many Philosophers used to do formerly, and as Catholic Friars do still) asked more of a spendthrift than of the others; "for" says he "I shall get something from them again.”

CCCXL. GRIMANUS.

When Fabius Grimanus was provost of Padua, some students bribed a poor ragged man to salute him in the street as his brother. The thing took place accordingly, and Grimanus, nothing daunted, led the man into his palace and treated him handsomely. Having extracted a confession from him, he sent for the students, and told them how happy he was at having found his brother, and that it only remained for them to relieve him from the penury and wretchedness in which his brother was found. He therefore made them pay down one hundred crowns.

CCCXLI. SHORT MEMORANDA.

Burney's edition of Bentley's Epistles is most inaccurate, Dyce says.

Scaliger's death and his ecclesiastical fears.

Eternity the life-time of the Almighty.

Porson's hat and a c-r-p-t.

Gratitude the memory of the heart. Dr Lee says that he saw the boy write it down.

Porson's Eloisa, Monthly Review, 64, 153.

Erskine, girl of 16, every Saturday, glass-coach, a house.

4 Vols of SIR WM DRUMMOND'S Origines the 4th, as Huttman says, is hardly known and is not in the British Museum, he has one.

drops of blood. Sellis, servants.

Memoirs of the Life of Don Rafael Del Riego by a Spanish officer, Author of the Last Days of Spain, 7s. 6d., printed for Partridge, 4 Royal Arcade, Pall-Mall.

The Last Days of Spain pr. 5s.

Gul. Burtoni Asiyava veteris Linguæ Persicæ, quæ apud priscos scriptores Græcos et Latinos reperiri potuerunt. Accedit Marci Zuerii Boxhornii Epistola ad Nic. Blancandum de Persicis Curtio memoratis vocabulis, eorumque cum Germanicis Cognatione. Præfatione, Notis, et Additamentis instructa a Jo. Henr. Von Steelen, Lubecæ, 1720 8.

D. Wilkinsii Dissertatio de Lingua Coptica, p. 94—112. Thesaurus Epistolicus La Crozianus, edidit Jo. Lud. Uhlius, Lips. 1742-6. 3 Vols small 4to.

Sylloge nova Epistolarum, collect. a J. L. Uhlio, Norimbergæ, 1760. 6 vols 8vo.

Arcadius Grammaticus MS. in Bibliotheca Regia Parisiensi. Isaaci Vossii Excerpta MSS. ex Arcadio Grammatico quæ Amstelodami in Bibliotheca Remonstrantium asservantur.

Wilkins's Dissert. de Ling. Copt. is in Chamberlayne's Lord's Prayer.

F. S. de Schmidt de Sacerdotihus Sacrificiis Ægyptiorum. COLERIDGE made a very fine speech, when he was only 18, which is inserted in the Friend.

An original Sermon of the Rev. ROBT HALL in the Evangelist, No 1. New Series, Nov. 1837. Simpkin.*

CCCXLII. Jekyll—Lord Kenyon's spit.

Some one spoke of the stingy Lord Kenyon: a friend had been over the house and premises and was particularly delighted with the kitchen, and specified the bright spil. "Well," said Jekyll, "nothing turns on that,-it is Lent all the year round, except on one day, which is Good-Friday."

CCCXLIII. THE SIX PHYSICIANS.

Of six Physicians, who dwelt and practised in a large city, two were remarkable for stinking breath, one for his tall emaciated figure, one for his quarrelsome disposition, and two for ignorance of their profession. A wit set upon them the following names "Plague-Pestilence-Famine-Battle-Murder and Sudden Death."

CCCXLIV. SIR E. COKE.

Sir E. Coke was wont to say to a friend who came in accidentally to dinner "Well, as you gave me no notice of your coming, you must dine with me. If I had been informed of it in time, I would have dined with you."

* It is of course needless to remark that these are mere memoranda, many of which no one but Mr Barker himself can hope to understand.

« AnteriorContinuar »