and Queries, Number 191, June 
25, 1853, by Various 
 
Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 191, June 25, 1853, by 
Various This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: Notes and Queries, Number 191, June 25, 1853 A Medium of 
Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, 
Geneologists, etc. 
Author: Various 
Editor: George Bell 
Release Date: January 15, 2007 [EBook #20368] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES 
AND QUERIES *** 
 
Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the 
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Transcriber's note: A few typographical errors have been corrected: 
they are listed at the end of the text. 
{613} 
NOTES AND QUERIES: 
A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, 
ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC. 
* * * * * 
"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE. 
* * * * * 
No. 191.] Saturday, June 25, 1853. [Price Fourpence. Stamped Edition 
5d. 
* * * * * 
CONTENTS. 
NOTES:-- Page 
Witchcraft in Somersetshire 613 
"Emblemata Horatiana," by Weld Taylor 614 
Shakspeare Criticism, by Thomas Keightley 615 
Red Hair a Reproach, by T. Hughes 616 
Extracts from Newspapers, 1714, by E. G. Ballard 616 
MINOR NOTES:--Last Suicide buried at a Cross Road. --Andrew's 
Edition of Freund's Latin Lexicon-- Slang Expressions--"Quem Deus 
vult perdere"-- White Roses 617
QUERIES:-- 
"Merk Lands" and "Ures:" Norwegian Antiquities 618 
The Leigh Peerage, and Stoneley Estates, Warwickshire 619 
MINOR QUERIES:--Phillips Family--Engine-à-verge --Garrick's 
Funeral Epigram--The Rosicrucians-- Passage in Schiller--Sir John 
Vanbrugh--Historical Engraving--Hall-close, Silverstone, 
Northamptonshire --Junius's Letters to Wilkes--The Reformer's 
Elm--How to take Paint off old Oak 619 
MINOR QUERIES WITH ANSWERS:--Cadenus and Vanessa 
--Boom--"A Letter to a Member of Parliament" --Ancient 
Chessmen--Guthryisms 620 
REPLIES:-- 
Correspondence of Cranmer and Calvin, by Henry Walter 621 
"Populus vult decipi," by Robert Gibbings, &c. 621 
Latin: Latiner 622 
Jack 622 
Passage in St. James, by T. J. Buckton, &c. 623 
Faithfull Teate 624 
Parvise 624 
The Coenaculum of Lionardo da Vinci 624 
Font Inscriptions, by F. B. Relton, &c. 625 
Burn at Croydon 626 
Christian Names, by William Bates, &c. 626
Weather Rules 627 
Rococo, by Henry H. Breen 627 
Descendants of John of Gaunt, by J. S. Warden 628 
The Order of St. John of Jerusalem 628 
REPLIES TO MINOR QUERIES:--Anticipatory Worship of the 
Cross--Ennui--"Qui facit per alium, facit per se," &c.--Vincent 
Family--Judge Smith--"Dimidiation" in 
Impalements--Worth--"Elementa sex," &c.--"A Diasii 'Salve,'" 
&c.--Meaning of "Claret" --"The Temple of Truth"--Wellborne Family 
--Devonianisms--Humbug--George Miller, D.D. --"A Letter to a 
Convocation Man"--Sheriffs of Huntingdonshire and 
Cambridgeshire--Ferdinand Mendez Pinto--"Other-some" and 
"Unneath" --Willow Pattern--Cross and Pile--Old Fogie --Another odd 
Mistake--Spontaneous Combustion --Erroneous Forms of 
Speech--Ecclesia Anglicana-- Gloves at Fairs--The Sparrows at 
Lindholme, &c. 629 
MISCELLANEOUS:-- 
Books and Odd Volumes wanted 634 
Notices to Correspondents 634 
Advertisements 634 
* * * * * 
Notes. 
WITCHCRAFT IN SOMERSETSHIRE. 
Perhaps the following account of superstitions now entertained in some 
parts of Somersetshire, will be interesting to the inquirers into the 
history of witchcraft. I was lately informed by a member of my 
congregation that two children living near his house were bewitched. I
made inquiries into the matter, and found that witchcraft is by far less 
uncommon than I had imagined. I can hardly adduce the two children 
as an authenticated case, because the medical gentleman who attended 
them pronounced their illness to be a kind of ague: but I leave the two 
following cases on record in "N. & Q." as memorable instances of 
witchcraft in the nineteenth century. 
A cottager, who does not live five minutes' walk from my house, found 
his pig seized with a strange and unaccountable disorder. He, being a 
sensible man, instead of asking the advice of a veterinary surgeon, 
immediately went to the white witch (a gentleman who drives a 
flourishing trade in this neighbourhood). He received his directions, 
and went home and implicitly followed them. In perfect silence, he 
went to the pigsty; and lancing each foot and both ears of the pig, he 
allowed the blood to run into a piece of common dowlas. Then taking 
two large pins, he pierced the dowlas in opposite directions; and still 
keeping silence, entered his cottage, locked the door, placed the bloody 
rag upon the fire, heaped up some turf over it, and reading a few verses 
of the Bible, waited till the dowlas was burned. As soon as this was 
done, he returned to the pigsty; found his pig perfectly restored to 
health, and, mirabile dictu! as the white witch had predicted, the old 
woman, who it was supposed had bewitched    
    
		
	
	
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