Notes and Queries, Number 28, May 11, 1850 by Various
page 33 of 67 (49%)
page 33 of 67 (49%)
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Simsons's Euclid, and hence may be referred to the year 1762. It was
written evidently by some {457} "dropper-in," who found "honest John" suffering from a severe cold, and upon the first piece of paper that came to hand. The writer's caligraphy bespeaks age, and the punctuation and erasures show him to have been a literary man, and a careful though stilted writer. It is not, however, a hand of which I find any other exemplars amongst Nourse's correspondence. "Take two glasses of the best brandy, put them into a cup which may stand over the fire; have two long wires, and put an ounce of sugar-candy upon the wires, and set the brandy on fire. Let it burn till it is put out by itself, and drink it before you go to bed. "To make it more pectoral, take some rosemary and put it in the brandy, infused for a whole day, before you burn it." This is the fundamental element of all the quack medicines for "coughs, colds, catarrhs, and consumption," from Ford's "Balsam of Horehound" to Dr. Solomon's "Balm of Gilead." T.S.D. Shooter's Hill, April 4. _Howkey or Horkey_ (No. 17. p. 263.).--Does the following passage from Sir Thomas Overbury's _Witty Descriptions of the Properties of sundry Persons_, first published, I believe, in 1614, afford any clue to the etymology of this word? It occurs in the description of a Frankling or |
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