Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - Volume 2.djvu/492

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NOTES AND QUERIES. [9 th s. n. DEC. 17,

P. 208 b. For " Blades" read Blaydes.

P. 252. James Thomson. See Coleridge, 'Friend,' 1883, p. 283.

P. 255 a. James Thomson's ' Modern Geo- graphy ' reached a fourth ed., Belfast, 1832.

P. 279 a. Abp. Thomson. See lllust. Land. Netvs, 7 Sept., 1861, p. 235. For " Cross- thwaite," " Bishopsthorpe " (bis), read Cros- thwaite, Bishopthorpe. He was a considerable contributor to Smith's 'Dictionary of the Bible'; two of his lectures, 'Materialistic Theories' and 'Design in Nature,' were printed by the Christian Evidence Society.

P. 280 b. For " Hovington " read Honington.

P. 281. "provided him " 1

P. 283. R. Thoresby was a friend of W". Derham, ' Physico-Theology,' 1723, p. 174. A " Thoresby Society " has been established at Leeds.

Pp. 283 a, 290 b. For " Kennet " read Ken- nett(xxxi. 2).

P. 284. For " Johnson " read Johnston.

P. 284 b. " Frascatorius " ? Fracastorius.

P. 285 b. For " Bishop's Hall " read Bishop's Hull.

Pp. 286-7. Bp. John Thornborough. Letters from him in Lansdowne MSS., No. 72, fo. 36, 37- No. 75, fp. 16, 18; account in Freher, 'Theatrum Virorum Eruditione Clarorum,' 1688; Poulson's ' Holderness,' i. 282-3; Gent. Mag., 1841, i. 338 ; Surtees Soc. Publ., vol. Ixviii. 379; Hart's 'Index Expurg. Anglic.,' 1872, p. 48 ; he ordained Richard Baxter at Worcester, 1638 ; his singular epitaph is explained in Smith and Onslow's ' Diocesan Hist, of Worcester.'

Pp. 289 a, 304 b. " The church " is not a profession, neither does it consist wholly of clergy.

Pp. 290-2. Thorndike. See 'Life of Dean Barwick.'

P. 296. Sir James Thornhill. See Free- Thinker, ed. 1742, i. 170, iii. 69.

Pp. 307-8. Col. Tho. Thornton. See Annual Register, 1806, 1823; 'Sportsman's Vocal Cabinet,' 1830 ; Leeds Mercury, 26 June, 1880, 4 Aug., 1883 ; Yorksh. Weekly Post, 8 Nov., 1890.

P. 331. Sir N. Throckmorton assisted Jewel to escape. Wordsworth, 'Eccl. Biog.,' iv. 30.

P. 341 a. SirEdw. Thurland em ployed John Oldham as tutor to his two grandsons, 1678-80. ' Poems,' ed. Bell, 1854, p. 9.

P. 362 a. Thwing is in the East Riding.

P. 367 a. For "Balanquil" read Balcan- quhall, q.v., iii. 25.

P. 368 a, Tho. Thynne. Long account of his death in Bp. Patrick's 'Autob.,' 1839, pp. 92-4 ; Oldham's ' Poems,' ed. Bell, p. 182.

P. 369 a. Deverill Longbridge ; 372 b, Long- bridge Deverill.

Pp. 380-1. Young's poem on Tickell, Am- hurst's ' Terrse Filius,' 1726, i. 151.

P. 383 b. "Bedford London" a word omitted.

P. 385. G. Tierney. See Mathias, 'P. of L.,' in trod. p. 28.

Pp. 392-8. Abp. Tillotson. Limborch's esteem for him, Locke's 'Letters,' 1708, pp. 361-2 ; he, Burnet, and Locke were " three of the greatest men that our country ever bred," Amhurst's 'Terrse Filius,' 1726, i. 99; "elo- quent and judicious," BlackwalPs 'Sacred Classics,' 1737, i. 57 ; a friend of Sir M. Hale Wordsworth's ' Ecclesiastical Biography,' vi. 45 ; popularity of his writings, Addison's ' Works,' 1726, ii. 293 ; his sermons recom- mended for ladies, Free-Thinker, No. 70, 1718, No. 154, 1719 ; his reputation as a preacher, Oldham, ed. Bell, 161 ; Farquhar's 'Works,' 1760, i. 91, his 'Sermon' before Charles II. was one of those reprinted in a cheap form by H. Hills "for the benefit of the poor"; his 'Sermons' reprinted at Hull, 1743; John Ray dedicated his 'Three Discourses' to him, and praised his first printed sermon in 'Creation'; his letter to Lord Russell, 1683, was read at Sacheverell's trial ; his ' Rule of Faith,' see Stillingfleet's ' Life,' 1710, p. 35 ; he wrote pre- face for Wilkins's 'Natural Religion,' 1675, and his ' Sermons,' 1682 ; edited Barrow's 'Works,' 1683 ; see Patrick's 'Autob.,' pp. 122, 133, 169 ; Wrangham's ' Zouch,' ii. 418-21.

P. 404. M. Tindal. W. Law was one of those who replied to ' Christianity as old as the Creation.' ' Works,' 1892, ii.

Pp. 407-8. Wm. Tindal. See May's ' Hist, of Evesham,' 1845, pp. 387-8 ; some of his MSS. were recently offered for sale by Mr. Cornish of Manchester.

P. 433 b, 1. 25. For "Colleges" read College.

P. 435 a. " head of the county constabu- lary "what county ? W. C. B.

Vol. LII.

P. 317. Sirr, Hy. Chas., was born at Dublin Castle, 25 Nov., 1764, not in 1756. Ensign 68th Regiment, 6 June, 1778, not 1768 ('Army List'); quitted service 1791, not 1790 (in 'Army List,' 1791); the last two lines but three in the first column should follow the comma on the twenty-fourth line in that column ; " and " after the comma should then become He. He married Elizabeth, eldest daughter of James (not Thomas) D'Arcy (Burke's ' Landed Gentry '). S.

LITTRE ,AT FAULT. One of the articles in Littre's ' Etudes et Glanures ' is a criticism of the French life in the ' Lives of Edward the Confessor,' edited by the late Dr. Luard for