Notes and Queries, Number 23, April 6, 1850 by Various
page 36 of 66 (54%)
page 36 of 66 (54%)
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his custody some more satisfactory solution of the difficulty. In the
meantime, let me refer to a Survey of Wrigmore Castle in the Lansdowne Collection, No. 40. fo. 82. The surveyor there reports, that the paling, rails, &c. of the park are much decayed in many and sundry places, and he estimates the repairs, with allowance of timber from the wood there, "by good surveye and oversight of the _poker_ and other officers of the said parke," at 4l. The date of the survey is 13 May, 1584. Comparing this notice of the office with the receiver's accounts tempore Hen. VII. and Hen. VIII. (_antè_, p. 269.), in which the officer is called "pocarius omnium boscorum," I cannot doubt that his duty, or at least one of his duties, was that of woodward, and that, as such, he assigned timber for repair of the premises. How he came by his local title and style of poker is a mystery on which we have all hitherto failed to throw any light. E.S. _Vox Populi Vox Dei_,--about the origin of which saying "QUÆSITOR" asks (No. 21. p. 321.),--were the words chosen by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Simon Mepham, as his text for the sermon which he preached when Edward III. was called to the throne, from which the nation had pulled down his father, Edward II. This we learn from Walsingham, who says: "Archiepiscopus verò Cantuariæ præsenti consensit electioni, ut omnes prælati et archiepiscopus quidem assumpto themate, _Vox populi Vox Dei_, sermonem fecit populo, exhortans |
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