Notes and Queries, Number 12, January 19, 1850 by Various
page 30 of 65 (46%)
page 30 of 65 (46%)
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transposed it), although, I think, we are wrong; for the given name
Adwin has existed in my own family for several centuries. John was always written Jhon till about the end of the sixteenth century; and in Chaucer's time, the word _third_, as every body knows, was written _thridde_, or _thrydde_. I believe that the _h_ in Jhon was introduced, as it was in other words in German, to give force to the following vowel. Certain letters were formerly used in old French in like manner, which were dropped upon the introduction of the accents. B. WILLIAMS. Hillingdon, Jan. 5. * * * * * PICTURES OF QUEEN ELIZABETH AND CHARLES I. IN CHURCHES. Your correspondent "R.O." will find two pictures of Charles I. of the same allegorical character as that described by him in his note (_antè_, p. 137.), one on the wall of the stairs leading to the north gallery of the church of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, and the other in the hall of the law courts in Guildhall Yard. I know nothing of the history of the first-mentioned picture; the latter, until within a few years, hung on the wall, above the {185} gallery, in the church of St. Olave, Jewry, when, upon the church undergoing repair, it was taken down, and, by the parishioners, presented to the corporation of London, who placed it in its present position. In the church of St. Olave there were two other pictures hung in the |
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