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, that's flat.' Says I, 'Now only think on that.' Says he, 'I'm come to torment you now;' Which was hard lines,--as you'll allow. 'So, Master Ghost, belay your jaw; For if on me you claps a claw, My locker yonder will reveal, A tight rope's end, which you shall feel.' Then off his winding-sheet he throwed, And by his trousers Tom I knowed; He wasn't dead; but come to mess, So here's an end,--as you may guess." The _implicatio_, the _agnitio_, and the _peripetia_ are so well worked out, that Aristotle would, I think, be compelled to admit it as an almost perfect specimen of that most ancient kind of drama which was recited by one actor. I refer especially to C. XXII. of the _Poetics_, which says, that that _agnitio_ is most beautiful which is joined with the _peripetia_, of which here we have so striking an example. These reasons embolden me to ask if it be worth preserving in "N. & Q," and who was the author? W. FRASER. Tor-Mohun. * * * * * Queries. JACOB BOBART AND HIS DRAGON, ETC. Dr. Zachary Grey, in his edition of _Hudibras_, vol. i. p. 125., relates the following anecdote: "Mr. Jacob Bobart, Botany Professor of Oxford, did, about forty years ago (in 1704), find a dead rat in the Physic Garden, which he made to resemble the common picture of dragons, by altering its head and tail, and thrusting in taper sharp sticks, which distended the skin on each side till it mimicked wings. He let it dry as hard as possible. The learned immediately pronounced it a dragon, and one of them sent an accurate description of it to Dr. Maliabechi, Librarian to the Grand Duke of Tuscany: _several fine copies of verses_ were wrote upon so rare a subject, but at last Mr. Bobart owned the cheat: however, it was looked upon as a masterpiece of art, and as such deposited in the anatomy schools (at Oxford), where I saw it some years after." Can any of the readers of "N. & Q." inform me where I can procure the _several_ fine copies of verses, or where they are to be seen, and any other particulars relating to Jacob Bobart? Where can I procure copies of the following, mentioned in Wood's _Athenae Oxon._, vol. iii. p. 757.: "Poem upon Mr. Jacob Bobards Yew-man of the Guards to the Physic Garden, to the tune of the 'Counter-Scuffle.' Oxon. 1662." On one side of a sheet of paper. Also: "A Ballad on the
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