Notes and Queries, Number 32, June 8, 1850 by Various
page 24 of 68 (35%)
page 24 of 68 (35%)
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word "ashes" should have been introduced at all, and whether its
introduction might not have been owing to the actual cremation of the funeral pyre at the burial of Gentile Christians? We were none of us profound enough to quote or produce any facts from the monuments and records of the early converts to account for the expression; but I conceive it probable that a solution could be readily given by some of your learned correspondents. The burning of the dead does not appear to be in itself an anti-christian ceremony, nor necessarily connected with Pagan idolatries, and therefore might have been tolerated in the case of Gentile believers like any other indifferent usage. CINIS. _Gaol Chaplains_.--When were they first appointed? Did the following advice of Latimer, in a sermon before King Edward, in 1549, take any effect? "Oh, I would ye would resort to prisons! A commendable thing in a Christian realm: I would wish there were curates of prisons, that we might say, the 'curate of Newgate, the curate of the Fleet,' and I would have them waged for their labour. It is a holiday work to visit the prisoners, for they be kept from sermons."--Vol. i. p. 180. THOS. COX. _Hanging out the Broom_ (Vol. i., p. 385.).--This custom exists in the West of England, but is oftener talked of than practised. It is |
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