Notes and Queries, Number 19, March 9, 1850 by Various
page 76 of 95 (80%)
page 76 of 95 (80%)
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_Journeyman._--Three or four years since, a paragraph went the round of
the press, deriving the English word "journeyman" from the custom of travelling among work-men in Germany. This derivation is very doubtful. Is it not a relic of Norman rule, from the French _journée_, signifying a day-man? In support of this it may be observed, that the German name for the word in question if _Tagelöhner_, or day-worker. It is also well known, that down to a comparatively recent period, artisans and free labourers were paid daily. Gomer. _Balloons._--In one of your early numbers you mention the _History of Ringwood_, &c. Many years since I sent to a periodical (I cannot recollect which) a circumstance connected with that town, which I never heard or read of anywhere, and which, as it is rather of importance, I forward to you in hopes that some of your correspondents may be able to throw some light upon it. When my father was in the Artillery Ground at the ascension of Lunardi's balloon, he remarked to several persons present, "This is no novelty to _me_; I remember well, when I was at school in Ringwood [about the year 1757], an apothecary in that town that used to let off _balloons_ (he had no other name, I suppose, to give them) on a smaller scale, but exactly corresponding with what he then saw, _many_ a time." I had several letters addressed to me, requesting further explanation, which, as my father was dead, I was unable to give. It is highly improbable that any persons now living may have it in their power to corroborate the fact, but some of their relations or descendants may. I suppose they must have been _fire-balloons_, and these of the rudest |
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