Notes and Queries, Number 03, November 17, 1849 by Various
page 28 of 57 (49%)
page 28 of 57 (49%)
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general credit of his work."--_Quarterly Review._
"Rarely polished, I never read so ill a style."--_Swift._ [7] Our correspondent should have added exact references to the places where these passages are to be found. Mr. Macaulay may have written these words quoted by our correspondent, in some hasty moment, but his summary of the character of Burnet in his _history of England_, ii. 175. 2nd Edition--a very noble and well considered passage--gives a very different and far juster estimate of Burnet's character. * * * * * QUEEN ELIZABETH'S DOMESTIC ESTABLISHMENT. Your readers may be curious to see a list of the persons composing the domestic establishment (as it may be called) of Queen Elizabeth in the middle of her reign, and an account of the sums of money severally allowed to them out of the privy purse of the sovereign. The payments will seem remarkably small, even allowing for the great difference in the value of money then and now. What that difference may be, I am not prepared to say; and I will venture here to put it as a "Query," to be answered by some competent person who may read this "Note." I have seen it stated by more than one writer, that the difference in the value of money at the end of Elizabeth's reign was at least five times, i.e. that one pound then would go as far as five pounds now; but I am not aware of the _data_ upon which the calculation was made. I apprehend, besides, that the difference was greater in 1582, to |
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