"He that high growth on cedars did bestow,Gave also lowlymushrumpsleave to growe."
"He that high growth on cedars did bestow,Gave also lowlymushrumpsleave to growe."
"He that high growth on cedars did bestow,
Gave also lowlymushrumpsleave to growe."
I suppose that this word has been derived fromMaesrhin, one of the names of the mushroom in Welsh. As the meanings of the wordrhinare "a channel," "a virtue," "a secret," "a charm," none of which are applicable to a mushroom, I conjecture that it is a corruption of the wordrhum(also speltrhump), but I am unable to mention an instance of the word being spelt by any Welsh writer of ancient times. The etymology which I suggest ismaesrhum; frommaes, "a field," andrhum, "a thing which bulges out." This meaning very nearly resembles that of the French name of one kind of mushroom,champignon.
S. S. S. (2.)
The Grave of Cromwell(Vol. v., p. 477.).—Mr. Oliver Pembertonhas referred your correspondent A. B. to Lockinge'sNasebyfor an account of the Protector's funeral and probable burial on the field of Naseby. As the volume may not be very generally known, would A. B. like a summary of Mr. Lockinge's ten 12mo. pages? or could you, Mr. Editor, spare room for the whole? Mastin, in hisHistory of Naseby, alludes to the doubts that have been expressed"relative to the funeral-place of the Protector Cromwell", and quotes a passage from Banks'sLife of Cromwell, but gives no opinion thereon.
Este.
Edmund Bohun(Vol. v., p. 539.).—Of Edmund Bohun'sHistorical Collections, in eight vols. folio, I became the purchaser at Mr. Bright's sale. They consist of a most curious and interesting collection of the newspapers, ballads, tracts, broadsides of the period (1675-92) in regular series, bound up with original MS. documents, and with a manuscript correspondence with Bohun from Hickes, Roger, Coke, Charlotte, and others, relating to the politics and news of the day. If your correspondentMr. Rix, from whom I am glad to find we are to expect the private Diary of Bohun, wishes for a more particular description of the volumes, I shall be happy to furnish it.
Jas. Crossley.
Sneezing(Vol. v., pp. 369. 500.).—D'Israeli, in the first series of theCuriosities, in a paper on the custom of saluting persons after sneezing, says:
"A memoir of the French Academy notices the practice in the New World, on the first discovery of America."
"A memoir of the French Academy notices the practice in the New World, on the first discovery of America."
A relation of mine tells me, that when young, he once fell down in a fit after a violent sneeze; the "Cryst helpe" may therefore not be totally superfluous!
A. A. D.
Braem's Memoires(Vol. v., pp. 126. 543.).—Permit me to informMr. J. F. L. Coenenthat the MS. volume containing Braem'sMemoires Touchant le Commerce, &c., is at Oxford, in the library of Sir Robert Taylor's Institution, where it may be seen and consulted, but cannot be disposed of.Mr. Coenenis thanked for his obliging information.
J. M.
Portrait of Mesmer(Vol. v., p. 418.).—I beg to informSigmathere is a very good engraved profile (bust) of Mesmer in a German work by him, entitledMesmerismus, oder System der Wechselwirkungen, &c., published at Berlin in 1814, in 1 vol. 8vo., a copy of which is now before me.
J. M.
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Biblia Sacra, Vulg. Edit. cum Commentar. Menochii. Alost and Ghent, 1826. Vol. I.
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Maria S.will find Ben. Jonson's "Verses on the Marriage of the Earl of Somerset" in No. 122., p. 193. of the present Volume.
W. M. H.The song quoted by Mr. Bernal Osborne, which begins,
"Who fears to speak of ninety-eight,"
"Who fears to speak of ninety-eight,"
"Who fears to speak of ninety-eight,"
is reprinted in a volume of poetry extracted from theNationnewspaper, and printed in Dublin under the title of "The Spirit of the Nation."
Eirionach's Note on the Fern will be welcome.
Cuthbert Bede.How can we forward a letter to this Correspondent?
W. M. H.The author of the work on the Apocalypse, to which our Correspondent refers, has no present intention of completing it, for reasons which our Correspondent would, we are sure, respect.
We are this week compelled by want of space to omit many articles of great interest—among which we may mention some Shakspearian Illustrations by Mr. Singer andA. E. B.;Mr. Sternberg's Popular Stories of the English Peasantry; Rev. R. Hooper's Account of a Copy of Æschylus, &c.; and for the same reason have omitted our usualNotes on BooksandList Of Replies Received.
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