Notes and Queries, Number 21, March 23, 1850 by Various
page 48 of 69 (69%)
page 48 of 69 (69%)
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verbs are connected.
C.B. _Ancient Motto--Barnacles_.--In reference to your querist in No. 6., respecting the motto which "some Pope or Emperor caused to be engraven in the centre of his table," and the correspondent in No. 7. who replies to him by a quotation from Horace, I beg to observe that honest Thomas Fuller, in _The Holy State_, 275. ed. Lond. 1648, tells us, that St. Augustine "had this distich written on his table:-- "Quisquis amat dictis absentem rodere famam, Hanc mensam indignam noverit esse sibi. * * * * * He that doth love on absent friends to jeere, May hence depart, no room is for him here." With respect to the Barnacle fowl, it may be an addendum, not uninteresting to your correspondent "W.B. MacCabe," to add to his extract from Giraldus another from Hector Boece, _History of Scotland_, "imprentit be Thomas Davidson, prenter to the Kyngis nobyll grace [James VI.]." He observes, that the opinion of some, that the "Claik geis growis on treis be the nebbis, is vane," and says he "maid na lytyll lauboure and deligence to serche the treuthe and virite yairof," having "salit throw the seis quhare thir Clakis ar bred," and assures us, that although they were produced in "mony syndry wayis, thay ar bred ay allanerly be nature of the seis." These fowls, he continues, are formed from worms which are found in wood that has been long immersed in salt water, and he avers that their transformation |
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