Chapter 7

LIST OF PUBLICATIONSOFWilliam Andrews & Co.,5 FARRINGDON AVENUE, LONDON.“Valuable and interesting.”—The Times.“Readable as well as instructive.”—The Globe.“A valuable addition to any library.”—Derbyshire Times.The Bygone Series.In this series the following volumes are included, and issued at 7s. 6d. each. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt.These books have been favourably reviewed in the leading critical journals of England and America.Carefully written articles by recognised authorities are included on history, castles, abbeys, biography, romantic episodes, legendary lore, traditional stories, curious customs, folk-lore, etc., etc.The works are illustrated by eminent artists, and by the reproduction of quaint pictures of the olden time.BYGONE BERKSHIRE, edited by Rev. P. H. Ditchfield, M.A., F.S.A.BYGONE CHESHIRE, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE DEVONSHIRE, by the Rev. Hilderic Friend.BYGONE DURHAM, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE GLOUCESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE HERTFORDSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE LEICESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE LINCOLNSHIRE (2 vols), edited by William Andrews.BYGONE MIDDLESEX, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE NORFOLK, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE NORTHUMBERLAND, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, by William Stevenson.BYGONE SCOTLAND, by David Maxwell, C.E.BYGONE SOMERSETSHIRE, edited by Cuming Walters.BYGONE SOUTHWARK, by Mrs. E. Boger.BYGONE SUFFOLK, edited by Cuming Walters.BYGONE SURREY, edited by George Clinch and S. W. Kershaw, F.S.A.BYGONE SUSSEX, by W. E. A. Axon.BYGONE WARWICKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.BYGONE YORKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.“Mr. Andrews’ books are always interesting.”—Church Bells.“No student of Mr. Andrews’ books can be a dull after-dinner speaker, for his writings are full of curious out-of-the-way information and good stories.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.England in the Days of Old.ByWILLIAM ANDREWS,F.R.H.S.Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.This volume is one of unusual interest and value to the lover of olden days and ways, and can hardly fail to interest and instruct the reader. It recalls many forgotten episodes, scenes, characters, manners, customs, etc., in the social and domestic life of England.Contents:—When Wigs were Worn—Powdering the Hair—Men Wearing Muffs—Concerning Corporation Customs—Bribes for the Palate—Rebel Heads on City Gates—Burial at Cross Roads—Detaining the Dead for Debt—A Nobleman’s Household in Tudor Times—Bread and Baking in Bygone Days—Arise, Mistress, Arise!—The Turnspit—A Gossip about the Goose—Bells as Time-Tellers—The Age of Snuffing—State Lotteries—Bear-Baiting—Morris Dancers—The Folk-Lore of Midsummer Eve—Harvest Home—Curious Charities—An Old-Time Chronicler.List of Illustrations:—The House of Commons in the time of Sir Robert Walpole—Egyptian Wig—The Earl of Albemarle—Campaign Wig—Periwig with Tail—Ramillie-Wig—Pig-tail Wig—Bag-Wig—Archbishop Tilotson—Heart-Breakers—A Barber’s Shop in the time of Queen Elizabeth—With and Without a Wig—Stealing a Wig—Man with Muff, 1693—Burying the Mace at Nottingham—The Lord Mayor of York escorting Princess Margaret—The Mayor of Wycombe going to the Guildhall—Woman wearing a Scold’s Bridle—The Brank—Andrew Marvell—Old London Bridge, shewing heads of rebels on the gate—Axe, Block, and Executioner’s Mask—Margaret Roper taking leave of her father, Sir Thomas More—Rebel Heads, from a print published in 1746—Temple Bar in Dr. Johnson’s time—Micklegate Bar, York—Clock, Hampton Court Palace—Drawing a Lottery in the Guildhall, 1751—Advertising the Last State Lottery—Partaking of the Pungent Pinch—Morris Dance, from a painted window at Betley—Morris Dance, temp. James I.—A Whitsun Morris Dance—Bear Garden, or Hope Theatre, 1647—The Globe Theatre, temp. Elizabeth—Plan of Bankside early in the Seventeenth Century—John Stow’s Monument.A carefully prepared Index enables the reader to refer to the varied and interesting contents of the book.“A very attractive and informing book.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“Mr. Andrews has the true art of narration, and contrives to give us the results of his learning with considerable freshness of style, whilst his subjects are always interesting and picturesque.”—Manchester Courier.“The book is of unusual interest.”—Eastern Morning News.“Of the many clever books which Mr. Andrews has written none does him greater credit than “England in the Days of Old,” and none will be read with greater profit.”—Northern Gazette.Bygone Punishments.By William Andrews.Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.Contents:—Hanging—Hanging in Chains—Hanging, Drawing, and Quartering—Pressing to Death—Drowning—Burning to Death—Boiling to Death—Beheading—The Halifax Gibbet—The Scottish Maiden—Mutilation—Branding—The Pillory—Punishing Authors and Burning Books—Finger Pillory—The Jougs—The Stocks—The Drunkard’s Cloak—Whipping and Whipping-Posts—Public Penance—The Repentance Stool—The Ducking Stool—The Brank, or Scold’s Bridle—Riding the Stang—Index.“A book of great interest.”—Manchester Courier.“Crowded with extraordinary facts.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“Contains much that is curious and interesting both to the student of history and social reformer.”—Lancashire Daily Express.“Full of curious lore, sought out and arranged with much industry.”—The Scotsman.“Mr. Andrews’ volume is admirably produced, and contains a collection of curious illustrations, representative of many of the punishments he describes, which contribute towards making it one of the most curious and entertaining books that we have perused for a long time.”—Norfolk Chronicle.“Those who wish to obtain a good general idea on the subject of criminal punishment in days long past, will obtain it in this well-printed and stoutly-bound volume.”—Daily Mail.“Mr. William Andrews, of Hull, is an indefatigable searcher amongst the byways of ancient English history, and it would be difficult to name an antiquary who, along his chosen lines, has made so thoroughly interesting and instructive the mass of facts a painstaking industry has brought to light. For twenty-five years he has been delving into the subject of Bygone Punishments, and is now one of the best authorities upon obsolete systems of jurisdiction and torture, for torture was, in various forms, the main characteristic of punishment in the good old times. The reformation of the person punished was a far more remote object of retribution than it is with us, and even with us reform is very much a matter of sentiment. Punishment was intended to be punishment to the individual in the first place, and in the second a warning to the rest. It is a gruesome study, but Mr. Andrews nowhere writes for mere effect. As an antiquary ought to do, he has made the collection of facts and their preservation for modern students of history in a clear, straightforward narrative his main object, and in this volume he keeps to it consistently. Every page is therefore full of curious, out-of-the-way facts, with authorities and references amply quoted.”—Yorkshire Post.Literary Byways.ByWILLIAM ANDREWS.Demy 8vo., cloth gilt, 7s. 6d.Contents:—Authors at Work—The Earnings of Authors—“Declined with Thanks”—Epigrams on Authors—Poetical Graces—Poetry on Panes—English Folk Rhymes—The Poetry of Toast Lists and Menu Cards—Toasts and Toasting—Curious American Old-Time Gleanings—The Earliest American Poetess: Anne Bradstreet—A Playful Poet: Miss Catherine Fanshawe—A Popular Song Writer: Mrs. John Hunter—A Poet of the Poor: Mary Pyper—The Poet of the Fisher-Folk: Mrs. Susan K. Phillips—A Poet and Novelist of the People: Thomas Miller—The Cottage Countess—The Compiler of “Old Moore’s Almanack”: Henry Andrews—James Nayler, the Mad Quaker, who claimed to be the Messiah—A Biographical Romance: Swan’s Strange Story—Short Letters—Index.“An interesting volume.”—Church Bells.“Turn where you will, there is information and entertainment in this book.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“The volume is most enjoyable.”—Perthshire Advertiser.“The volume consists of entertaining chapters written in a chatty style.”—Daily Advertiser.“A readable volume about authors and books.... Like Mr. Andrews’s other works, the book shows wide out-of-the-way reading.”—Glasgow Herald.“Dull after-dinner speakers should be compelled to peruse this volume, and ornament their orations and per-orations with its gems.”—Sunday Times.“An entertaining volume.... No matter where the book is opened, the reader will find some amusing and instructive matter.”—Dundee Advertiser.“Readable and entertaining.”—Notes and Queries.“Mr. Andrews delights in the production of the pleasant, gossipy order of books. He is well qualified, indeed, to do so, for he is painstaking in the collection of interesting literary facts, methodical in setting them forth, and he loves books with genuine ardour.”—Aberdeen Free Press.“We heartily commend this volume to the attention of readers who are in any way interested in literature.”—Scots Pictorial.The Church Treasury of History, Custom, Folk-Lore, etc.Edited byWILLIAM ANDREWS.Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.Contents:—Stave-Kirks—Curious Churches of Cornwall—Holy Wells—Hermits and Hermit Cells—Church Wakes—Fortified Church Towers—The Knight Templars: their Churches and their Privileges—English Mediæval Pilgrimages—Pilgrims’ Signs—Human Skin on Church Doors—Animals of the Church in Wood, Stone, and Bronze—Queries in Stones—Pictures in Churches—Flowers and the Rites of the Church—Ghost Layers and Ghost Laying—Church Walks—Westminster Waxworks—Index. Numerous Illustrations.“It is a work that will prove interesting to the clergy and churchmen generally, and to all others who have an antiquarian turn of mind, or like to be regaled occasionally by reading old-world customs and anecdotes.”—Church Family Newspaper.“Mr. Andrews has given us some excellent volumes of Church lore, but none quite so good as this. The subjects are well chosen. They are treated brightly and with considerable detail, and they are well illustrated.... Mr. Andrews is himself responsible for some of the most interesting papers, but all his helpers have caught his own spirit, and the result is a volume full of information well and pleasantly put.”—London Quarterly Review.“Those who seek information regarding curious and quaint relics or customs will find much to interest them in this book. The illustrations are good.”—Publishers’ Circular.“An excellent and entertaining book.”—Newcastle Daily Leader.“The book will be welcome to every lover of archæological lore.”—Liverpool Daily Post.“The volume is of a most informing and suggestive character, abounding in facts not easy of access to the ordinary reader, and enhanced with illustrations of a high order of merit, and extremely numerous.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“The contents of the volume are very good.”—Leeds Mercury.“The volume is sure to meet with a cordial reception.”—Manchester Courier.“A fascinating book.”—Stockport Advertiser.“Mr. Andrews has brought together much curious matter.”—Manchester Guardian.“The book is a very readable one, and will receive a hearty welcome.”—Herts. Advertiser.“Mr. William Andrews has been able to give us a very acceptable and useful addition to the books which deal with the curiosities of Church lore, and for this deserves our hearty thanks. The manner in which the book is printed and illustrated also commands our admiration.”—Norfolk Chronicle.Historic Dress of the Clergy.By the Rev.GEO. S. TYACK,B.A.,Author of “The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.”Crown, cloth extra, 3s. 6d.The work contains thirty-three illustrations from ancient monuments, rare manuscripts, and other sources.“A very painstaking and very valuable volume on a subject which is just now attracting much attention. Mr. Tyack has collected a large amount of information from sources not available to the unlearned, and has put together his materials in an attractive way. The book deserves and is sure to meet with a wide circulation.”—Daily Chronicle.“This book is written with great care, and with an evident knowledge of history. It is well worth the study of all who wish to be better informed upon a subject which the author states in his preface gives evident signs of a lively and growing interest.”—Manchester Courier.“Those who are interested in the Dress of the Clergy will find full information gathered together here, and set forth in a lucid and scholarly way.”—Glasgow Herald.“We are glad to welcome yet another volume from the author of ‘The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.’ His subject, chosen widely and carried out comprehensively, makes this a valuable book of reference for all classes. It is only the antiquary and the ecclesiologist who can devote time and talents to research of this kind, and Mr. Tyack has done a real and lasting service to the Church of England by collecting so much useful and reliable information upon the dress of the clergy in all ages, and offering it to the public in such a popular form. We do not hesitate to recommend this volume as the most reliable and the most comprehensive illustrated guide to the history and origin of the canonical vestments and other dress worn by the clergy, whether ecclesiastical, academical, or general, while the excellent work in typography and binding make it a beautiful gift-book.”—Church Bells.“A very lucid history of ecclesiastical vestments from Levitical times to the present day.”—Pall Mall Gazette.“The book can be recommended to the undoubtedly large class of persons who are seeking information on this and kindred subjects.”—The Times.“The work may be read either as pastime or for instruction, and is worthy of a place in the permanent section of any library. The numerous illustrations, extensive contents table and index, and beautiful workmanship, both in typography and binding, are all features of attraction and utility.”—Dundee Advertiser.The Miracle Play in England,An Account of the Early Religious Drama.BySIDNEY W. CLARKE,Barrister-at-Law.Crown 8vo., 3s. 6d. Illustrated.In bygone times the Miracle Play formed an important feature in the religious life of England. To those taking an interest in the history of the Church of England, this volume will prove useful. The author has given long and careful study to this subject, and produced a reliable and readable book, which can hardly fail to interest and instruct the reader. It is a volume for general reading, and for a permanent place in the reference library.Contents:—The Origin of Drama—The Beginnings of English Drama—The York Plays—The Wakefield Plays—The Chester Plays—The Coventry Plays—Other English Miracle Plays—The Production of a Miracle Play—The Scenery, Properties, and Dresses—Appendix—The Order of the York Plays—Extract from City Register of York, 1426—The Order of the Wakefield Plays—The Order of the Chester Plays—The Order of the Grey Friars’ Plays at Coventry—A Miracle Play in a Puppet Show—Index.“Mr. Clarke has chosen a most interesting subject, one that is attractive alike to the student, the historian, and the general reader.... A most interesting volume, and a number of quaint illustrations add to its value.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“The book should be useful to many.”—Manchester Guardian.“An admirable work.”—Eastern Morning News.“Mr. Sidney Clarke’s concise monograph in ‘The Miracle Play in England’ is another of the long and interesting series of antiquarian volumes for popular reading issued by the same publishing house. The author briefly sketches the rise and growth of the ‘Miracle’ or ‘Mystery’ play in Europe and in England; and gives an account of the series or cycle of these curious religious dramas—the forerunners of the modern secular play—performed at York, Wakefield, Chester, Coventry, and other towns in the middle ages. But his chief efforts are devoted to giving a sketch of the manner of production, and the scenery, properties, and dresses of the old miracle play, as drawn from the minute account books of the craft and trade guilds and other authentic records of the period. Mr. Clarke has gone to the best sources for his information, and the volume, illustrated by quaint cuts, is an excellent compendium of information on a curious byeway of literature and art.”—The Scotsman.A Book About Bells.By the Rev.GEO. S. TYACK,B.A.,Author of the “Historic Dress of the Clergy,” etc.Crown, cloth extra, 6s.Contents:—Invention of Bells—Bell Founding and Bell Founders—Dates and Names of Bells—The Decoration of Bells—Some Noteworthy Bells—The Loss of Old Bells—Towers and Campaniles—Bell-Ringing and Bell-Ringers—The Church-Going Bell—Bells at Christian Festivals and Fasts—The Epochs of Man’s Life Marked by the Bells—The Blessings and the Cursings of the Bells—Bells as Time-Markers—Secular Uses of Church and other Bells—Small Bells, Secular and Sacred—Carillons—Belfry Rhymes and Legends—Index of Subjects, Index of Places.THIRTEEN FULL-PAGE PLATES.“A most useful and interesting book.... All who are interested in bells will, we feel confident, read it with pleasure and profit.”—Church Family Newspaper.“A pleasing, graceful, and scholarly book.... A handsome volume which will be prized by the antiquary, and can be perused with delight and advantage by the general reader.”—Notes and Queries.“‘A Book About Bells’ can be heartily commended.”—Pall Mall Gazette.“An excellent and entertaining book, which we commend to the attention not only of those who are specially interested in the subject of bells, but to all lovers of quaint archæological lore.”—Glasgow Herald.“The book is well printed and artistic in form.”—Manchester Courier.“‘A Book About Bells’ is destined to be the work of reference on the subject, and it ought to find a home on the shelves of every library.”—Northern Gazette.“The task Mr. Tyack has set himself, he has carried out admirably, and throughout care and patient research are apparent.”—Lynn News.“We heartily recommend our readers to procure this volume.”—The Churchwoman.“An entertaining work.”—Yorkshire Post.“‘A Book About Bells’ will interest almost everyone. Antiquaries will find in it an immense store of information: but the general reader will equally feel that it is a book well worth reading from beginning to end.”—The News, Edited by the Rev. Charles Bullock,B.D.“An excellent work.”—Stockton Herald.“It is a well-written work, and it is sure to be popular.”—Hull Christian Voice.“Covers the whole field of bell-lore.”—Scotsman.“Most interesting and finely illustrated.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.Legal Lore: Curiosities of Law and Lawyers.Edited byWILLIAM ANDREWS,F.R.H.S.Demy 8vo., Cloth extra, 7s. 6d.Contents:—Bible Law—Sanctuaries—Trials in Superstitious Ages—On Symbols—Law Under the Feudal System—The Manor and Manor Law—Ancient Tenures—Laws of the Forest—Trial by Jury in Old Times—Barbarous Punishments—Trials of Animals—Devices of the Sixteenth Century Debtors—Laws Relating to the Gipsies—Commonwealth Law and Lawyers—Cock-Fighting in Scotland—Cockieleerie Law—Fatal Links—Post-Mortem Trials—Island Laws—The Little Inns of Court—Obiter.“There are some very amusing and curious facts concerning law and lawyers. We have read with much interest the articles on Sanctuaries, Trials in Superstitious Ages, Ancient Tenures, Trials by Jury in Old Times, Barbarous Punishments, and Trials of Animals, and can heartily recommend the volume to those who wish for a few hours’ profitable diversion in the study of what may be called the light literature of the law.”—Daily Mail.“Most amusing and instructive reading.”—The Scotsman.“The contents of the volume are extremely entertaining, and convey not a little information on ancient ideas and habits of life. While members of the legal profession will turn to the work for incidents with which to illustrate an argument or point a joke, laymen will enjoy its vivid descriptions of old-fashioned proceedings and often semi-barbaric ideas to obligation and rectitude.”—Dundee Advertiser.“The subjects chosen are extremely interesting, and contain a quantity of out-of-the-way and not easily accessible information.... Very tastefully printed and bound.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“The book is handsomely got up; the style throughout is popular and clear, and the variety of its contents, and the individuality of the writers gave an added charm to the work.”—Daily Free Press.“The book is interesting both to the general reader and the student.”—Cheshire Notes and Queries.“Those who care only to be amused will find plenty of entertainment in this volume, while those who regard it as a work of reference will rejoice at the variety of material, and appreciate the careful indexing.”—Dundee Courier.“Very interesting subjects, lucidly and charmingly written. The versatility of the work assures for it a wide popularity.”—Northern Gazette.“A happy and useful addition to current literature.”—Norfolk Chronicle.“The book is a very fascinating one, and it is specially interesting to students of history as showing the vast changes which, by gradual course of development have been brought about both in the principles and practice of the law.”—The Evening Gazette.Antiquities and Curiosities of the Church.Edited byWILLIAM ANDREWS,F.R.H.S.Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.Contents:—Church History and Historians—Supernatural Interference in Church Building—Ecclesiastical Symbolism in Architecture—Acoustic Jars—Crypts—Heathen Customs at Christian Feasts—Fish and Fasting—Shrove-tide and Lenten Customs—Wearing Hats in Church—The Stool of Repentance—Cursing by Bell, Book, and Candle—Pulpits—Church Windows—Alms-Boxes and Alms-Dishes—Old Collecting Boxes—Gargoyles—Curious Vanes—People and Steeple Rhymes—Sun-Dials—Jack of the Clock-House—Games in Churchyards—Circular Churchyards—Church and Churchyard Charms and Cures—Yew Trees in Churchyards.“A very entertaining work.”—Leeds Mercury.“A well-printed, handsome, and profusely illustrated work.”—Norfolk Chronicle.“There is much curious and interesting reading in this popular volume, which moreover has a useful index.”—Glasgow Herald.“The contents of the volume is exceptionally good reading, and crowded with out-of-the way, useful, and well selected information on a subject which has an undying interest.”—Birmingham Mercury.“In concluding this notice it is only the merest justice to add that every page of it abounds with rare and often amusing information, drawn from the most accredited sources. It also abounds with illustrations of our old English authors, and it is likely to prove welcome not only to the Churchman, but to the student of folk-lore and of poetical literature.”—Morning Post.“We can recommend this volume to all who are interested in the notable and curious things that relate to churches and public worship in this and other countries.”—Newcastle Daily Journal.“It is very handsomely got up and admirably printed, the letterpress being beautifully clear.”—Lincoln Mercury.“The book is well indexed.”—Daily Chronicle.“By delegating certain topics to those most capable of treating them, the editor has the satisfaction of presenting the best available information in a very attractive manner.”—Dundee Advertiser.“It must not be supposed that the book is of interest only to Churchmen, although primarily so, for it treats in such a skilful and instructive manner with ancient manners and customs as to make it an invaluable book of reference to all who are concerned in the seductive study of antiquarian subjects.”—Chester Courant.Curious Church Customs,AND COGNATE SUBJECTS.Edited by William Andrews, F.R.H.S.Demy 8vo, price 7s. 6d.Contents:—Sports in Churches—Holy Day Customs—Church Bells: When and Why They were Rung—Inscriptions on Bells—Laws of the Belfry—Ringers’ Jugs—Customs and Superstitions of Baptism—Marriage Customs—Burial Customs—Concerning the Churchyard—Altars in Churches—The Rood Loft and its Uses—Armour in Churches—Beating the Bounds—The Story of the Croiser—Bishops in Battle—The Cloister and its Story—Shorthand in Church—Reminiscences of our Village Church—Index.“The book is an interesting addition to antiquarian and popular literature.”—The Scotsman.“A highly interesting work.... There are in all nineteen chapters, containing a large and varied amount of information on many subjects, respecting which the general public are not too well informed.”—Somerset County Herald.“An extremely interesting work.”—The Bazaar.“A distinctly valuable addition to the literature dealing with the antiquities of the Church.”—The Evening Post.“A varied and comprehensive volume, evidently the outcome of much patient research.”—The World.“The value of the book is greatly enhanced by an admirable index.”—North Eastern Gazette.“It is as interesting as a novel.”—Blackburn Standard.“We are indebted to Mr. Andrews for an invaluable addition to our library of folk-lore, and we do not think that many who take it up will skip a single page.”—Dundee Advertiser.“A thoroughly excellent volume.”—Publishers’ Circular.“Very interesting.”—To-Day.“Mr. Andrews is too practised an historian not to have made the most of his subject.”—Review of Reviews.“A handsomely got up and interesting volume.”—The Fireside.The Prime Minister of Würtemburg.ByELLER,Author of “Ingatherings.”Crown 8vo. Bound in cloth extra, 3s. 6d.“This anonymously-written story is of much power, and presents to us a picture of the Government in Würtemburg a hundred and sixty years ago, when the reigning Duke Alexandra, in his indulgence and foolishly fond treatment of his Cabinet Minister and Finance Director, the Jew Siece, has placed his subjects at the mercy of a crafty and designing man. How his object to overthrow the hero of the story, Gustave Lanbek, and his father, by forcing him to take an office which would bring him the contempt of his friends and the hatred of the people, was ultimately frustrated by the encompassing of his own ruin, is a plot which is developed and completed in a most dramatic manner. There is, too, a thread of love-making, the course of which runs by no means smoothly, deftly introduced into the main theme of the story, which lightens and relieves the plot. The book is one which we have thoroughly enjoyed, and both author and publishers are to be complimented upon the production of a volume effectively written and attractively printed and bound.”—Norfolk Chronicle.“The book has the great merit of soon interesting the reader. The get-up of the book reflects credit upon the publishers.”—Daily Mail.“A pretty story well told.”—Hull News.“Ingatherings.”ByELLER.Crown 8vo. Elegantly bound in cloth extra, 3s 6d.“This is an exceedingly interesting collection of writings in prose and poetry. The book opens with a quaint story descriptive of the manner in which a young German nobleman, by his purity and goodness, delivered an old baron and his lovely daughter from the power of the evil one. Among the other pieces of prose are ‘The Voices of Nature,’ ‘A Dream,’ ‘A Reverie,’ each of which proves the author to possess considerable ability. Their artistic style is delightfully refreshing. The poems are for the most part original, but there are one or two gems from the pens of Goethe, Schiller, and other master-minds. The publishers are to be congratulated on the general get-up of the book.”—Chester Courant.The Church Bells of Holderness.By GODFREY RICHARD PARK.Crown 8vo, cloth extra. Only 300 copies printed.Contents:—History—Legends—Marriage Bell—Passing Bell—Priest’s Bell—Litany Bell—Sermon Bell—Saunce Bell—Sanctus Bell—Sacring Bell—Jesus Bell—Howslinge Bell—The Arc Bell—Curfew Bell—Harvest Bell—Pancake Bell—Christmas Day—Good Friday—Easter Sunday—All Hallows’—Royal Oak Day—Gowrie Plot—Gunpowder Plot—Change Ringing—Dedication of Churches—Inscriptions on the Church Bells of Holderness—Dedication of Church Bells—Index.“To all who are interested in church bells Mr. Park’s book will afford interesting reading.”—Hull Times.“A capital volume includes much out-of-the-way information on the bell in history, legend, and custom, and cannot fail to entertain all who take an interest in the church bells.”—Leamington Advertiser.“Mr. Park’s volume makes a welcome contribution to antiquarian literature.”—Hull Christian Voice.Essex in the Days of Old.Edited byJOHN T. PAGE.Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Numerous illustrations.Contents:—Witchcraft in Essex—Charles Dickens and Chigwell—Hadleigh Castle—Daniel Defoe in Essex—Harbottle Grimston, Puritan and Patriot—In the Reign of Terror—John Locke and Oates—The Homes and Haunts of Elizabeth Fry—The Notorious Dean of Bocking and the “Eikon Basilike”—Barking Abbey—The Round Church of Little Maplestead—Waltham Holy Cross—Queen Elizabeth in Essex—The Salmons and Haddocks of Leigh—The Dutch Refugees and the Bay and Say Trade—John Strype and Leyton—The Brass of Archbishop Harsnett—Old Southend—The Bartlow Hills—Index.“An extremely interesting and useful contribution to historic literature.”—East Anglian Times.“An attractive volume.”—Norfolk Chronicle.“The volume is choicely illustrated, and should attract readers far beyond the county of which it treats.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.“It is a readable and useful book.”—The Times.The Doomed Ship; or, The Wreck in the Arctic Regions.ByWILLIAM HURTON.Crown 8vo., Elegantly Bound, Gilt extra, 3s. 6d.“There is no lack of adventures, and the writer has a matter-of-fact way of telling them.”—Spectator.“‘The Doomed Ship,’ by William Hurton, is a spirited tale of adventures in the old style of sea-stories. Mr. Hurton seems to enter fully into the manliness of sea life.”—Idler.“It is not surprising to learn that the Arctic boom has created a great demand for books of this class, and that the volume before us in particular is selling rapidly. It is entitled ‘The Doomed Ship, or the Wreck in the Arctic Regions.’ By William Hurton. (London: William Andrews and Co., 5, Farringdon Avenue, E.C. Three Shillings and Sixpence). It is of general interest, but it is written in an attractive style, nicely printed, and handsomely bound. Brimful of adventures in the ice-bound regions of the North, it also gives a great deal of information which the reading public are taking a great interest in since Dr. Nansen’s exploits have been brought before the world. The story is told in the form of a narrative by the nephew of the captain of the ‘good barque Lady Emily, chartered from Hull to Tromso, in Holland.’ The vessel sailed on a Friday—an unlucky day in the eyes of superstitious sailors, and which to their minds accounted for the dire experiences which afterwards befell the vessel and the crew. The vessel was laden with coals and salt, and, after leaving Tromso, was to proceed to St. Petersburg to ship timber and deals for the return voyage. She had twenty-two hands, and at Tromso took on board a passenger for Copenhagen, in the person of a young Danish lady, Oriana Neilsen by name. Chepini, an Italian lad, in revenge for being flogged by the captain’s orders, so manipulated the compass that the ship was taken hopelessly out of her course. Chepini is hung up to the yard arm. The vessel is at the time surrounded by icebergs, a gale springs up, and she is forced on to one of the bergs and remains fast by the bow, while a mutiny occurs among the crew, which is not quelled till the mutineers are killed, as well as the captain and cook. Oriana plays a noble part in the affair, and the nephew of the captain and she take command of the remainder of the crew, now consisting only of “Blackbird Jim” and an Irishman and a Scotchman. As the ship’s bows were stove in, and it was evident that whenever she cleared the iceberg she would go down, the longboat was cleared away, and all the provisions and other necessaries put into it. The survivors landed on an ice-bound shore, and the story of their adventures, discoveries, and subsequent rescue does not contain a dull page. Oriana is the heroine throughout, and the late captain’s nephew of course falls in love with her. When they return to civilisation the couple are, of course, married, and they, also of course, live happily ever afterwards. All the same, the development of this state of affairs comes naturally enough in the narrative, which is, as we have already indicated, full of interest.”—Eastern Morning News.“The interesting story ends in a satisfactory manner.”—Dundee Advertiser.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONSOFWilliam Andrews & Co.,5 FARRINGDON AVENUE, LONDON.

“Valuable and interesting.”—The Times.

“Readable as well as instructive.”—The Globe.

“A valuable addition to any library.”—Derbyshire Times.

The Bygone Series.

In this series the following volumes are included, and issued at 7s. 6d. each. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt.

These books have been favourably reviewed in the leading critical journals of England and America.

Carefully written articles by recognised authorities are included on history, castles, abbeys, biography, romantic episodes, legendary lore, traditional stories, curious customs, folk-lore, etc., etc.

The works are illustrated by eminent artists, and by the reproduction of quaint pictures of the olden time.

“Mr. Andrews’ books are always interesting.”—Church Bells.

“No student of Mr. Andrews’ books can be a dull after-dinner speaker, for his writings are full of curious out-of-the-way information and good stories.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

England in the Days of Old.

ByWILLIAM ANDREWS,F.R.H.S.

Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.

This volume is one of unusual interest and value to the lover of olden days and ways, and can hardly fail to interest and instruct the reader. It recalls many forgotten episodes, scenes, characters, manners, customs, etc., in the social and domestic life of England.

Contents:—When Wigs were Worn—Powdering the Hair—Men Wearing Muffs—Concerning Corporation Customs—Bribes for the Palate—Rebel Heads on City Gates—Burial at Cross Roads—Detaining the Dead for Debt—A Nobleman’s Household in Tudor Times—Bread and Baking in Bygone Days—Arise, Mistress, Arise!—The Turnspit—A Gossip about the Goose—Bells as Time-Tellers—The Age of Snuffing—State Lotteries—Bear-Baiting—Morris Dancers—The Folk-Lore of Midsummer Eve—Harvest Home—Curious Charities—An Old-Time Chronicler.

List of Illustrations:—The House of Commons in the time of Sir Robert Walpole—Egyptian Wig—The Earl of Albemarle—Campaign Wig—Periwig with Tail—Ramillie-Wig—Pig-tail Wig—Bag-Wig—Archbishop Tilotson—Heart-Breakers—A Barber’s Shop in the time of Queen Elizabeth—With and Without a Wig—Stealing a Wig—Man with Muff, 1693—Burying the Mace at Nottingham—The Lord Mayor of York escorting Princess Margaret—The Mayor of Wycombe going to the Guildhall—Woman wearing a Scold’s Bridle—The Brank—Andrew Marvell—Old London Bridge, shewing heads of rebels on the gate—Axe, Block, and Executioner’s Mask—Margaret Roper taking leave of her father, Sir Thomas More—Rebel Heads, from a print published in 1746—Temple Bar in Dr. Johnson’s time—Micklegate Bar, York—Clock, Hampton Court Palace—Drawing a Lottery in the Guildhall, 1751—Advertising the Last State Lottery—Partaking of the Pungent Pinch—Morris Dance, from a painted window at Betley—Morris Dance, temp. James I.—A Whitsun Morris Dance—Bear Garden, or Hope Theatre, 1647—The Globe Theatre, temp. Elizabeth—Plan of Bankside early in the Seventeenth Century—John Stow’s Monument.

A carefully prepared Index enables the reader to refer to the varied and interesting contents of the book.

“A very attractive and informing book.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“Mr. Andrews has the true art of narration, and contrives to give us the results of his learning with considerable freshness of style, whilst his subjects are always interesting and picturesque.”—Manchester Courier.

“The book is of unusual interest.”—Eastern Morning News.

“Of the many clever books which Mr. Andrews has written none does him greater credit than “England in the Days of Old,” and none will be read with greater profit.”—Northern Gazette.

Bygone Punishments.

By William Andrews.

Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.

Contents:—Hanging—Hanging in Chains—Hanging, Drawing, and Quartering—Pressing to Death—Drowning—Burning to Death—Boiling to Death—Beheading—The Halifax Gibbet—The Scottish Maiden—Mutilation—Branding—The Pillory—Punishing Authors and Burning Books—Finger Pillory—The Jougs—The Stocks—The Drunkard’s Cloak—Whipping and Whipping-Posts—Public Penance—The Repentance Stool—The Ducking Stool—The Brank, or Scold’s Bridle—Riding the Stang—Index.

“A book of great interest.”—Manchester Courier.

“Crowded with extraordinary facts.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“Contains much that is curious and interesting both to the student of history and social reformer.”—Lancashire Daily Express.

“Full of curious lore, sought out and arranged with much industry.”—The Scotsman.

“Mr. Andrews’ volume is admirably produced, and contains a collection of curious illustrations, representative of many of the punishments he describes, which contribute towards making it one of the most curious and entertaining books that we have perused for a long time.”—Norfolk Chronicle.

“Those who wish to obtain a good general idea on the subject of criminal punishment in days long past, will obtain it in this well-printed and stoutly-bound volume.”—Daily Mail.

“Mr. William Andrews, of Hull, is an indefatigable searcher amongst the byways of ancient English history, and it would be difficult to name an antiquary who, along his chosen lines, has made so thoroughly interesting and instructive the mass of facts a painstaking industry has brought to light. For twenty-five years he has been delving into the subject of Bygone Punishments, and is now one of the best authorities upon obsolete systems of jurisdiction and torture, for torture was, in various forms, the main characteristic of punishment in the good old times. The reformation of the person punished was a far more remote object of retribution than it is with us, and even with us reform is very much a matter of sentiment. Punishment was intended to be punishment to the individual in the first place, and in the second a warning to the rest. It is a gruesome study, but Mr. Andrews nowhere writes for mere effect. As an antiquary ought to do, he has made the collection of facts and their preservation for modern students of history in a clear, straightforward narrative his main object, and in this volume he keeps to it consistently. Every page is therefore full of curious, out-of-the-way facts, with authorities and references amply quoted.”—Yorkshire Post.

Literary Byways.

ByWILLIAM ANDREWS.

Demy 8vo., cloth gilt, 7s. 6d.

Contents:—Authors at Work—The Earnings of Authors—“Declined with Thanks”—Epigrams on Authors—Poetical Graces—Poetry on Panes—English Folk Rhymes—The Poetry of Toast Lists and Menu Cards—Toasts and Toasting—Curious American Old-Time Gleanings—The Earliest American Poetess: Anne Bradstreet—A Playful Poet: Miss Catherine Fanshawe—A Popular Song Writer: Mrs. John Hunter—A Poet of the Poor: Mary Pyper—The Poet of the Fisher-Folk: Mrs. Susan K. Phillips—A Poet and Novelist of the People: Thomas Miller—The Cottage Countess—The Compiler of “Old Moore’s Almanack”: Henry Andrews—James Nayler, the Mad Quaker, who claimed to be the Messiah—A Biographical Romance: Swan’s Strange Story—Short Letters—Index.

“An interesting volume.”—Church Bells.

“Turn where you will, there is information and entertainment in this book.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“The volume is most enjoyable.”—Perthshire Advertiser.

“The volume consists of entertaining chapters written in a chatty style.”—Daily Advertiser.

“A readable volume about authors and books.... Like Mr. Andrews’s other works, the book shows wide out-of-the-way reading.”—Glasgow Herald.

“Dull after-dinner speakers should be compelled to peruse this volume, and ornament their orations and per-orations with its gems.”—Sunday Times.

“An entertaining volume.... No matter where the book is opened, the reader will find some amusing and instructive matter.”—Dundee Advertiser.

“Readable and entertaining.”—Notes and Queries.

“Mr. Andrews delights in the production of the pleasant, gossipy order of books. He is well qualified, indeed, to do so, for he is painstaking in the collection of interesting literary facts, methodical in setting them forth, and he loves books with genuine ardour.”—Aberdeen Free Press.

“We heartily commend this volume to the attention of readers who are in any way interested in literature.”—Scots Pictorial.

The Church Treasury of History, Custom, Folk-Lore, etc.

Edited byWILLIAM ANDREWS.

Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.

Contents:—Stave-Kirks—Curious Churches of Cornwall—Holy Wells—Hermits and Hermit Cells—Church Wakes—Fortified Church Towers—The Knight Templars: their Churches and their Privileges—English Mediæval Pilgrimages—Pilgrims’ Signs—Human Skin on Church Doors—Animals of the Church in Wood, Stone, and Bronze—Queries in Stones—Pictures in Churches—Flowers and the Rites of the Church—Ghost Layers and Ghost Laying—Church Walks—Westminster Waxworks—Index. Numerous Illustrations.

“It is a work that will prove interesting to the clergy and churchmen generally, and to all others who have an antiquarian turn of mind, or like to be regaled occasionally by reading old-world customs and anecdotes.”—Church Family Newspaper.

“Mr. Andrews has given us some excellent volumes of Church lore, but none quite so good as this. The subjects are well chosen. They are treated brightly and with considerable detail, and they are well illustrated.... Mr. Andrews is himself responsible for some of the most interesting papers, but all his helpers have caught his own spirit, and the result is a volume full of information well and pleasantly put.”—London Quarterly Review.

“Those who seek information regarding curious and quaint relics or customs will find much to interest them in this book. The illustrations are good.”—Publishers’ Circular.

“An excellent and entertaining book.”—Newcastle Daily Leader.

“The book will be welcome to every lover of archæological lore.”—Liverpool Daily Post.

“The volume is of a most informing and suggestive character, abounding in facts not easy of access to the ordinary reader, and enhanced with illustrations of a high order of merit, and extremely numerous.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“The contents of the volume are very good.”—Leeds Mercury.

“The volume is sure to meet with a cordial reception.”—Manchester Courier.

“A fascinating book.”—Stockport Advertiser.

“Mr. Andrews has brought together much curious matter.”—Manchester Guardian.

“The book is a very readable one, and will receive a hearty welcome.”—Herts. Advertiser.

“Mr. William Andrews has been able to give us a very acceptable and useful addition to the books which deal with the curiosities of Church lore, and for this deserves our hearty thanks. The manner in which the book is printed and illustrated also commands our admiration.”—Norfolk Chronicle.

Historic Dress of the Clergy.

By the Rev.GEO. S. TYACK,B.A.,Author of “The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.”

Crown, cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

The work contains thirty-three illustrations from ancient monuments, rare manuscripts, and other sources.

“A very painstaking and very valuable volume on a subject which is just now attracting much attention. Mr. Tyack has collected a large amount of information from sources not available to the unlearned, and has put together his materials in an attractive way. The book deserves and is sure to meet with a wide circulation.”—Daily Chronicle.

“This book is written with great care, and with an evident knowledge of history. It is well worth the study of all who wish to be better informed upon a subject which the author states in his preface gives evident signs of a lively and growing interest.”—Manchester Courier.

“Those who are interested in the Dress of the Clergy will find full information gathered together here, and set forth in a lucid and scholarly way.”—Glasgow Herald.

“We are glad to welcome yet another volume from the author of ‘The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.’ His subject, chosen widely and carried out comprehensively, makes this a valuable book of reference for all classes. It is only the antiquary and the ecclesiologist who can devote time and talents to research of this kind, and Mr. Tyack has done a real and lasting service to the Church of England by collecting so much useful and reliable information upon the dress of the clergy in all ages, and offering it to the public in such a popular form. We do not hesitate to recommend this volume as the most reliable and the most comprehensive illustrated guide to the history and origin of the canonical vestments and other dress worn by the clergy, whether ecclesiastical, academical, or general, while the excellent work in typography and binding make it a beautiful gift-book.”—Church Bells.

“A very lucid history of ecclesiastical vestments from Levitical times to the present day.”—Pall Mall Gazette.

“The book can be recommended to the undoubtedly large class of persons who are seeking information on this and kindred subjects.”—The Times.

“The work may be read either as pastime or for instruction, and is worthy of a place in the permanent section of any library. The numerous illustrations, extensive contents table and index, and beautiful workmanship, both in typography and binding, are all features of attraction and utility.”—Dundee Advertiser.

The Miracle Play in England,An Account of the Early Religious Drama.

BySIDNEY W. CLARKE,Barrister-at-Law.

Crown 8vo., 3s. 6d. Illustrated.

In bygone times the Miracle Play formed an important feature in the religious life of England. To those taking an interest in the history of the Church of England, this volume will prove useful. The author has given long and careful study to this subject, and produced a reliable and readable book, which can hardly fail to interest and instruct the reader. It is a volume for general reading, and for a permanent place in the reference library.

Contents:—The Origin of Drama—The Beginnings of English Drama—The York Plays—The Wakefield Plays—The Chester Plays—The Coventry Plays—Other English Miracle Plays—The Production of a Miracle Play—The Scenery, Properties, and Dresses—Appendix—The Order of the York Plays—Extract from City Register of York, 1426—The Order of the Wakefield Plays—The Order of the Chester Plays—The Order of the Grey Friars’ Plays at Coventry—A Miracle Play in a Puppet Show—Index.

“Mr. Clarke has chosen a most interesting subject, one that is attractive alike to the student, the historian, and the general reader.... A most interesting volume, and a number of quaint illustrations add to its value.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“The book should be useful to many.”—Manchester Guardian.

“An admirable work.”—Eastern Morning News.

“Mr. Sidney Clarke’s concise monograph in ‘The Miracle Play in England’ is another of the long and interesting series of antiquarian volumes for popular reading issued by the same publishing house. The author briefly sketches the rise and growth of the ‘Miracle’ or ‘Mystery’ play in Europe and in England; and gives an account of the series or cycle of these curious religious dramas—the forerunners of the modern secular play—performed at York, Wakefield, Chester, Coventry, and other towns in the middle ages. But his chief efforts are devoted to giving a sketch of the manner of production, and the scenery, properties, and dresses of the old miracle play, as drawn from the minute account books of the craft and trade guilds and other authentic records of the period. Mr. Clarke has gone to the best sources for his information, and the volume, illustrated by quaint cuts, is an excellent compendium of information on a curious byeway of literature and art.”—The Scotsman.

A Book About Bells.

By the Rev.GEO. S. TYACK,B.A.,Author of the “Historic Dress of the Clergy,” etc.

Crown, cloth extra, 6s.

Contents:—Invention of Bells—Bell Founding and Bell Founders—Dates and Names of Bells—The Decoration of Bells—Some Noteworthy Bells—The Loss of Old Bells—Towers and Campaniles—Bell-Ringing and Bell-Ringers—The Church-Going Bell—Bells at Christian Festivals and Fasts—The Epochs of Man’s Life Marked by the Bells—The Blessings and the Cursings of the Bells—Bells as Time-Markers—Secular Uses of Church and other Bells—Small Bells, Secular and Sacred—Carillons—Belfry Rhymes and Legends—Index of Subjects, Index of Places.

THIRTEEN FULL-PAGE PLATES.

“A most useful and interesting book.... All who are interested in bells will, we feel confident, read it with pleasure and profit.”—Church Family Newspaper.

“A pleasing, graceful, and scholarly book.... A handsome volume which will be prized by the antiquary, and can be perused with delight and advantage by the general reader.”—Notes and Queries.

“‘A Book About Bells’ can be heartily commended.”—Pall Mall Gazette.

“An excellent and entertaining book, which we commend to the attention not only of those who are specially interested in the subject of bells, but to all lovers of quaint archæological lore.”—Glasgow Herald.

“The book is well printed and artistic in form.”—Manchester Courier.

“‘A Book About Bells’ is destined to be the work of reference on the subject, and it ought to find a home on the shelves of every library.”—Northern Gazette.

“The task Mr. Tyack has set himself, he has carried out admirably, and throughout care and patient research are apparent.”—Lynn News.

“We heartily recommend our readers to procure this volume.”—The Churchwoman.

“An entertaining work.”—Yorkshire Post.

“‘A Book About Bells’ will interest almost everyone. Antiquaries will find in it an immense store of information: but the general reader will equally feel that it is a book well worth reading from beginning to end.”—The News, Edited by the Rev. Charles Bullock,B.D.

“An excellent work.”—Stockton Herald.

“It is a well-written work, and it is sure to be popular.”—Hull Christian Voice.

“Covers the whole field of bell-lore.”—Scotsman.

“Most interesting and finely illustrated.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

Legal Lore: Curiosities of Law and Lawyers.

Edited byWILLIAM ANDREWS,F.R.H.S.

Demy 8vo., Cloth extra, 7s. 6d.

Contents:—Bible Law—Sanctuaries—Trials in Superstitious Ages—On Symbols—Law Under the Feudal System—The Manor and Manor Law—Ancient Tenures—Laws of the Forest—Trial by Jury in Old Times—Barbarous Punishments—Trials of Animals—Devices of the Sixteenth Century Debtors—Laws Relating to the Gipsies—Commonwealth Law and Lawyers—Cock-Fighting in Scotland—Cockieleerie Law—Fatal Links—Post-Mortem Trials—Island Laws—The Little Inns of Court—Obiter.

“There are some very amusing and curious facts concerning law and lawyers. We have read with much interest the articles on Sanctuaries, Trials in Superstitious Ages, Ancient Tenures, Trials by Jury in Old Times, Barbarous Punishments, and Trials of Animals, and can heartily recommend the volume to those who wish for a few hours’ profitable diversion in the study of what may be called the light literature of the law.”—Daily Mail.

“Most amusing and instructive reading.”—The Scotsman.

“The contents of the volume are extremely entertaining, and convey not a little information on ancient ideas and habits of life. While members of the legal profession will turn to the work for incidents with which to illustrate an argument or point a joke, laymen will enjoy its vivid descriptions of old-fashioned proceedings and often semi-barbaric ideas to obligation and rectitude.”—Dundee Advertiser.

“The subjects chosen are extremely interesting, and contain a quantity of out-of-the-way and not easily accessible information.... Very tastefully printed and bound.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“The book is handsomely got up; the style throughout is popular and clear, and the variety of its contents, and the individuality of the writers gave an added charm to the work.”—Daily Free Press.

“The book is interesting both to the general reader and the student.”—Cheshire Notes and Queries.

“Those who care only to be amused will find plenty of entertainment in this volume, while those who regard it as a work of reference will rejoice at the variety of material, and appreciate the careful indexing.”—Dundee Courier.

“Very interesting subjects, lucidly and charmingly written. The versatility of the work assures for it a wide popularity.”—Northern Gazette.

“A happy and useful addition to current literature.”—Norfolk Chronicle.

“The book is a very fascinating one, and it is specially interesting to students of history as showing the vast changes which, by gradual course of development have been brought about both in the principles and practice of the law.”—The Evening Gazette.

Antiquities and Curiosities of the Church.

Edited byWILLIAM ANDREWS,F.R.H.S.

Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations.

Contents:—Church History and Historians—Supernatural Interference in Church Building—Ecclesiastical Symbolism in Architecture—Acoustic Jars—Crypts—Heathen Customs at Christian Feasts—Fish and Fasting—Shrove-tide and Lenten Customs—Wearing Hats in Church—The Stool of Repentance—Cursing by Bell, Book, and Candle—Pulpits—Church Windows—Alms-Boxes and Alms-Dishes—Old Collecting Boxes—Gargoyles—Curious Vanes—People and Steeple Rhymes—Sun-Dials—Jack of the Clock-House—Games in Churchyards—Circular Churchyards—Church and Churchyard Charms and Cures—Yew Trees in Churchyards.

“A very entertaining work.”—Leeds Mercury.

“A well-printed, handsome, and profusely illustrated work.”—Norfolk Chronicle.

“There is much curious and interesting reading in this popular volume, which moreover has a useful index.”—Glasgow Herald.

“The contents of the volume is exceptionally good reading, and crowded with out-of-the way, useful, and well selected information on a subject which has an undying interest.”—Birmingham Mercury.

“In concluding this notice it is only the merest justice to add that every page of it abounds with rare and often amusing information, drawn from the most accredited sources. It also abounds with illustrations of our old English authors, and it is likely to prove welcome not only to the Churchman, but to the student of folk-lore and of poetical literature.”—Morning Post.

“We can recommend this volume to all who are interested in the notable and curious things that relate to churches and public worship in this and other countries.”—Newcastle Daily Journal.

“It is very handsomely got up and admirably printed, the letterpress being beautifully clear.”—Lincoln Mercury.

“The book is well indexed.”—Daily Chronicle.

“By delegating certain topics to those most capable of treating them, the editor has the satisfaction of presenting the best available information in a very attractive manner.”—Dundee Advertiser.

“It must not be supposed that the book is of interest only to Churchmen, although primarily so, for it treats in such a skilful and instructive manner with ancient manners and customs as to make it an invaluable book of reference to all who are concerned in the seductive study of antiquarian subjects.”—Chester Courant.

Curious Church Customs,AND COGNATE SUBJECTS.

Edited by William Andrews, F.R.H.S.

Demy 8vo, price 7s. 6d.

Contents:—Sports in Churches—Holy Day Customs—Church Bells: When and Why They were Rung—Inscriptions on Bells—Laws of the Belfry—Ringers’ Jugs—Customs and Superstitions of Baptism—Marriage Customs—Burial Customs—Concerning the Churchyard—Altars in Churches—The Rood Loft and its Uses—Armour in Churches—Beating the Bounds—The Story of the Croiser—Bishops in Battle—The Cloister and its Story—Shorthand in Church—Reminiscences of our Village Church—Index.

“The book is an interesting addition to antiquarian and popular literature.”—The Scotsman.

“A highly interesting work.... There are in all nineteen chapters, containing a large and varied amount of information on many subjects, respecting which the general public are not too well informed.”—Somerset County Herald.

“An extremely interesting work.”—The Bazaar.

“A distinctly valuable addition to the literature dealing with the antiquities of the Church.”—The Evening Post.

“A varied and comprehensive volume, evidently the outcome of much patient research.”—The World.

“The value of the book is greatly enhanced by an admirable index.”—North Eastern Gazette.

“It is as interesting as a novel.”—Blackburn Standard.

“We are indebted to Mr. Andrews for an invaluable addition to our library of folk-lore, and we do not think that many who take it up will skip a single page.”—Dundee Advertiser.

“A thoroughly excellent volume.”—Publishers’ Circular.

“Very interesting.”—To-Day.

“Mr. Andrews is too practised an historian not to have made the most of his subject.”—Review of Reviews.

“A handsomely got up and interesting volume.”—The Fireside.

The Prime Minister of Würtemburg.

ByELLER,Author of “Ingatherings.”

Crown 8vo. Bound in cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

“This anonymously-written story is of much power, and presents to us a picture of the Government in Würtemburg a hundred and sixty years ago, when the reigning Duke Alexandra, in his indulgence and foolishly fond treatment of his Cabinet Minister and Finance Director, the Jew Siece, has placed his subjects at the mercy of a crafty and designing man. How his object to overthrow the hero of the story, Gustave Lanbek, and his father, by forcing him to take an office which would bring him the contempt of his friends and the hatred of the people, was ultimately frustrated by the encompassing of his own ruin, is a plot which is developed and completed in a most dramatic manner. There is, too, a thread of love-making, the course of which runs by no means smoothly, deftly introduced into the main theme of the story, which lightens and relieves the plot. The book is one which we have thoroughly enjoyed, and both author and publishers are to be complimented upon the production of a volume effectively written and attractively printed and bound.”—Norfolk Chronicle.

“The book has the great merit of soon interesting the reader. The get-up of the book reflects credit upon the publishers.”—Daily Mail.

“A pretty story well told.”—Hull News.

“Ingatherings.”

ByELLER.

Crown 8vo. Elegantly bound in cloth extra, 3s 6d.

“This is an exceedingly interesting collection of writings in prose and poetry. The book opens with a quaint story descriptive of the manner in which a young German nobleman, by his purity and goodness, delivered an old baron and his lovely daughter from the power of the evil one. Among the other pieces of prose are ‘The Voices of Nature,’ ‘A Dream,’ ‘A Reverie,’ each of which proves the author to possess considerable ability. Their artistic style is delightfully refreshing. The poems are for the most part original, but there are one or two gems from the pens of Goethe, Schiller, and other master-minds. The publishers are to be congratulated on the general get-up of the book.”—Chester Courant.

The Church Bells of Holderness.

By GODFREY RICHARD PARK.

Crown 8vo, cloth extra. Only 300 copies printed.

Contents:—History—Legends—Marriage Bell—Passing Bell—Priest’s Bell—Litany Bell—Sermon Bell—Saunce Bell—Sanctus Bell—Sacring Bell—Jesus Bell—Howslinge Bell—The Arc Bell—Curfew Bell—Harvest Bell—Pancake Bell—Christmas Day—Good Friday—Easter Sunday—All Hallows’—Royal Oak Day—Gowrie Plot—Gunpowder Plot—Change Ringing—Dedication of Churches—Inscriptions on the Church Bells of Holderness—Dedication of Church Bells—Index.

“To all who are interested in church bells Mr. Park’s book will afford interesting reading.”—Hull Times.

“A capital volume includes much out-of-the-way information on the bell in history, legend, and custom, and cannot fail to entertain all who take an interest in the church bells.”—Leamington Advertiser.

“Mr. Park’s volume makes a welcome contribution to antiquarian literature.”—Hull Christian Voice.

Essex in the Days of Old.

Edited byJOHN T. PAGE.

Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Numerous illustrations.

Contents:—Witchcraft in Essex—Charles Dickens and Chigwell—Hadleigh Castle—Daniel Defoe in Essex—Harbottle Grimston, Puritan and Patriot—In the Reign of Terror—John Locke and Oates—The Homes and Haunts of Elizabeth Fry—The Notorious Dean of Bocking and the “Eikon Basilike”—Barking Abbey—The Round Church of Little Maplestead—Waltham Holy Cross—Queen Elizabeth in Essex—The Salmons and Haddocks of Leigh—The Dutch Refugees and the Bay and Say Trade—John Strype and Leyton—The Brass of Archbishop Harsnett—Old Southend—The Bartlow Hills—Index.

“An extremely interesting and useful contribution to historic literature.”—East Anglian Times.

“An attractive volume.”—Norfolk Chronicle.

“The volume is choicely illustrated, and should attract readers far beyond the county of which it treats.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.

“It is a readable and useful book.”—The Times.

The Doomed Ship; or, The Wreck in the Arctic Regions.

ByWILLIAM HURTON.

Crown 8vo., Elegantly Bound, Gilt extra, 3s. 6d.

“There is no lack of adventures, and the writer has a matter-of-fact way of telling them.”—Spectator.

“‘The Doomed Ship,’ by William Hurton, is a spirited tale of adventures in the old style of sea-stories. Mr. Hurton seems to enter fully into the manliness of sea life.”—Idler.

“It is not surprising to learn that the Arctic boom has created a great demand for books of this class, and that the volume before us in particular is selling rapidly. It is entitled ‘The Doomed Ship, or the Wreck in the Arctic Regions.’ By William Hurton. (London: William Andrews and Co., 5, Farringdon Avenue, E.C. Three Shillings and Sixpence). It is of general interest, but it is written in an attractive style, nicely printed, and handsomely bound. Brimful of adventures in the ice-bound regions of the North, it also gives a great deal of information which the reading public are taking a great interest in since Dr. Nansen’s exploits have been brought before the world. The story is told in the form of a narrative by the nephew of the captain of the ‘good barque Lady Emily, chartered from Hull to Tromso, in Holland.’ The vessel sailed on a Friday—an unlucky day in the eyes of superstitious sailors, and which to their minds accounted for the dire experiences which afterwards befell the vessel and the crew. The vessel was laden with coals and salt, and, after leaving Tromso, was to proceed to St. Petersburg to ship timber and deals for the return voyage. She had twenty-two hands, and at Tromso took on board a passenger for Copenhagen, in the person of a young Danish lady, Oriana Neilsen by name. Chepini, an Italian lad, in revenge for being flogged by the captain’s orders, so manipulated the compass that the ship was taken hopelessly out of her course. Chepini is hung up to the yard arm. The vessel is at the time surrounded by icebergs, a gale springs up, and she is forced on to one of the bergs and remains fast by the bow, while a mutiny occurs among the crew, which is not quelled till the mutineers are killed, as well as the captain and cook. Oriana plays a noble part in the affair, and the nephew of the captain and she take command of the remainder of the crew, now consisting only of “Blackbird Jim” and an Irishman and a Scotchman. As the ship’s bows were stove in, and it was evident that whenever she cleared the iceberg she would go down, the longboat was cleared away, and all the provisions and other necessaries put into it. The survivors landed on an ice-bound shore, and the story of their adventures, discoveries, and subsequent rescue does not contain a dull page. Oriana is the heroine throughout, and the late captain’s nephew of course falls in love with her. When they return to civilisation the couple are, of course, married, and they, also of course, live happily ever afterwards. All the same, the development of this state of affairs comes naturally enough in the narrative, which is, as we have already indicated, full of interest.”—Eastern Morning News.

“The interesting story ends in a satisfactory manner.”—Dundee Advertiser.

Footnotes:

[1]“Iona: its History, Antiquities, etc.,” by Rev. A. MacMillan and Robert Brydall, 1898.

[2]“Church and other Bells of Kincardineshire.”

[3]“Church and other Bells of Kincardineshire,” Eeles.

[4]Chambers’ “History of Peebles.”

[5]“Bell Lore,” North.

[6]Hope’s Reprint “Popish Kingdome.”

[7]“Bell Lore,” North.

[8]“Bell Lore,” North.

[9]Eeles.

[10]“Bells of Exeter Cathedral,” p. 7.

[11]The Relief Church originated in 1752 in opposition to the system of patronage, and received its name from its relief from that burden. In 1847 it became, by union with the Secession Church, the United Presbyterian Church.

[12]For the accompanying illustrations of a repentance-stool, and of the jagg or jougs, I am indebted to Mr Wm. Andrews, from whose work on “Bygone Punishments” (London 1899) they are taken.

[13]The spelling of this and the following extracts is modernised.

Transcriber’s Notes:

“St.” and “St” are used inconsistently throughout the original text.

Other than the correction noted by hover information, inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the original.


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