Notes and Queries, Number 17, February 23, 1850 by Various
page 26 of 66 (39%)
page 26 of 66 (39%)
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_Howkey or Horkey._-- Can anybody explain the etymology of the word _Howkey_ or _Horkey_, generally used to denote a harvest-home merriment in our eastern counties? Forbes speaks of it as an intractable word, and neither he nor Sir J. Cullum have succeeded in explaining it satisfactorily. BRAYBROOKE. Audley End, Feb. 16. _Lord Bacon's Metrical Version of the Psalms._--The answer in No. 15. p. 235. to A CORNISHMAN'S Query (No. 13. p. 202) respecting "Bacon's Metrical Version of the Psalms," suggests another query. The work in question was a mere "exercise of sickness;" it contains only seven psalms (the 1st, 12th, 90th, 104th, 126th, 137th, and 149th), and is, without pretension of any kind, a very proper diversion for a mind that could not be inactive and yet required rest; and very good verses for a man unpractised in metrical composition. The _Collection of Apophthegms_ (also a recreation in sickness), though considerably larger and altogether weightier, was considered so trifling a work that Dr. Rawley, in his "perfect list of his Lordship's true works, &c.," appended to the first edition of the _Resuscitatio_ (1657), either forgot or did not think fit to mention it. Yet both these trifles were not only written but _published_, by Bacon himself the year before his death--a thing quite contrary to his practice; for though he had written and carefully preserved and circulated in manuscript so much, he had till then published nothing that was not of the weightiest and most solid kind. Can any of your correspondents |
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