مرکزی صفحہ
Notes and Queries Death of Henry Ireton
Death of Henry Ireton
Cock, F. Williamآپ کو یہ کتاب کتنی پسند ہے؟
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جلد:
176
زبان:
english
رسالہ:
Notes and Queries
DOI:
10.1093/nq/176.24.429f
Date:
June, 1939
فائل:
PDF, 112 KB
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فائل آپ کے ای میل ایڈریس پر بھیجی جائگی۔ اسے موصول ہونے میں 5 منٹ تک کا وقت لگ سکتا ہے۔.
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نوٹ کریں : آپ کو ہر کتاب کی تصدیق کرنی ہوگی جسے آپ اپنے Kindle میں بھیجنا چاہیں۔ Amazon Kindle سے تصدیقی ای میل کے لیے اپنا میل باکس چیک کریں۔
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آپ کتاب کا معائنہ کر سکتے ہیں اور اپنے تجربات شیئر کرسکتے ہیں۔ دوسرے قارئین کتابوں کے بارے میں آپ کی رائے میں ہمیشہ دلچسپی رکھیں گے۔ چاہے آپ کو کتاب پسند ہے یا نہیں ، اگر آپ اپنے دیانتدار اور تفصیلی خیالات دیںگے تو لوگوں کو نئی کتابیں ملیںگی جو ان کے لئے صحیح ہیں۔
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JDNE 17. 1939. NOTES AND QUERIES. (2) two attempts by Mortimer Collins; (3) A. G. Hilton's admirable ' Octopus ' from the immortal Light Green; (4) Andrew Lang's ' Ballade of Cricket)' and ' The Palace of Bric-a-brac ' ; (5) best of all, Swinburne's own from ' Nephelidia,' of which one line must be quoted: " Made much of as a mother whose bosom-beats bound with the bliss-bringing bulk of a balm-breathing baby." RICHARD HTJSSET. Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nq/article-abstract/176/24/429/4182473 by University of Glasgow user on 30 November 2019 A book on the medical side of this subject is the ' History of Cold-Bathing, both Ancient and Modern,' in two parts, which had reached a sixth edition in 1732. The first part is by ' Sir John Floyer, of Lichfield, Kt.,' the doctor whose book on asthma Johnson read. The second is by Dr. Edward Baynard, who insists that " the best cures done by the Cold Baths are lately observed to arise from the Temperate Use of the Hot Baths first." Dr. Barnard collected a number of letters from correspondents who indulge in some vigorous writing. Pleasant verses appear here and there. A doctor in missing a cure is never to blame: So unknown is the Cause of every Disease, Lockt up in Daine Nature, who alone keeps the Keys. Tho' we write in the Light, yet prescribe in the Dark,. And, is-'t not a chance then if we e'er hit the mark? Antonius Musa applied the cold water cure successfully to the Emperor Augustus, but Horace does not seem very grateful to him, to judge from the reference in the Epistles. 429 The " R. L. Binyon, Trinity College," who appears in ' Echoes from the Oxford Magazine,' 1890, is now better known for his serious verse. But he won a place as a star in .he Oxford galaxy with his parody ' The Garden of Criticism,' with humble apologies to ' The Garden' of Proserpine.' It begins : Blunt beyond brute or Briton, Crowned with calm quills she stands, Who gathers all things written With cold unwriting hands. Later she Joys so; metimes to know it And is not slow to show it, That even the _ heavenliest poet SENEX. Sinks somewhere safe to prose. T. C. C. The Douce Prints, Bodleian Library, offer some evidence; see Portfolio 3 and 136, in the DEATH OF HENRY IRETON (clxxvi. 287, first of which there is a print by S. le Clerc 323, 357, 390).—MB. E. S. DE BEEB has got of " Marshal Dangeau taking the Bath." In "together the relative accounts of the death the second is a print, undated but apparently of Henryall Ireton. to these, he may of the seventeenth century, showing a large have died from (a) According pneumonia, (6) malignant and handsomely furnished bedchamber with malaria, (c) a combination of both (a) and four-poster, wardrobes, chests and a stove, (b). There is no definite statement of sympand in the foreground a large marble bath toms and so there is no definite possibility sunk three steps into the floor, with a basin- of diagnosis. course, pneumonic plague fountain, surmounted by a group of statuary was well knownOf(e.g., Black Death), but the against the wall. seventeenth-century type was the bubonic S. RADICE. form, so I am obliged to leave the question unsettled. Foxcombe Orchard, Boars Hill, Oxford. F. WILLIAM COCK, M.D. PRISONERS' OCCUPATIONS (clxxvi. •*• 332).—Denzil Holies in the Tower was The view which MB. E. S. DE BEEB attrifound by some visitor whirling a top; he had butes to me is the orthodox view, which has been swinging dumb-bells; and he showed apparently only been challenged in recent them his " topp and skurdgstick " ; Forster, times, and has all the available evidence in its ' Sir John Eliot ' ii. 475. Leigh Hunt prac- favour. tised jumping, skipping and top whipping; There is no best evidence, but an impresExaminer, Feb. 6, 1814. sive volume of secondary evidence, already noted, to which I might add James Heath's RlCHAKD HuSSEY. Chronicle. MB. DE BEER gives no reasons for his particular selection of " best authoriPARODIES OF SWINBURNE (clxxvi. x 390).—The Oxford ' Century of Parody ties," nor does he explain his dismissal of all and Imitation ' gives (1) H. C. Bunner's the rest as based on " hearsay." If best evifantasia on " Home, Sweet Home " d la dence was then available, why was it only A. C. S., where the words " exile from available-to Whitelocke? Home," naturally bring in Victor Hugo; Instances of the employment- of .an