Notes and Queries, Number 17, February 23, 1850 by Various
page 40 of 66 (60%)
page 40 of 66 (60%)
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of Æschylus, and was reprinted 1670. 1677."
C.I.R. _Ave Trici and Gheeze Ysenoudi._--I regret that I cannot give "H.L.B." any further information about these ladies than the colophon I transcribed affords. To me, however, it is quite clear that they were sisters of some convent in Flanders or Holland; the name of their spiritual father, Nicolas Wyt, and the names of the ladies, clearly indicate this. S.W.S. _Daysman_ (No. 12. p. 188.)-- It seems to me that a preferable etymology may be found to that given by Nares and Jacob. The arbiter or judge might formerly have occupied a _dais_ or _lit de justice_, or he might have been selected from those entitled to sit on the raised parts of the courts of law, i.e. jurisconsulti, or barristers as we call them. I have heard another etymology, which however I do not favour, that the arbiter, chosen from men of the same rank as the disputants, should be paid for loss of his day's work. GEORGE OLIVER. Perhaps the following may be of some use in clearing up this point. In the _Graphic Illustrator_, a literary and antiquarian miscellany edited by E.W. Brayley, London, 1834, at p. 14, towards the end of |
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