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n full view, O A toaster erected Y And a cheese cut in two, D." Ballard MSS. in the Bodleian, vol. xxix. p. 80. BALLIOLENSIS. _Berefellarii_ (Vol. viii., p. 420.).--M. PHILARETE CHASLES has misrepresented JOHN JEBB'S Query and conjecture about _berefellarii_ (Vol. vii., p. 207.). He never spoke of these officers as "_half ecclesiastics_ (!), dirty, shabby, ill-washed attendants." They were priests of an inferior grade, answering to the minor canons of cathedrals, and superior to the vicars choral, who were also called _personae_ and _rectores chori_. He has far too great a respect for collegiate foundations to use such opprobrious terms when speaking of any class of ministers of divine service. The only conjecture J. JEBB made was, that the word might possibly have been a corruption (arising from incorrect writing) of _beneficiarii_, which is continually used abroad for the inferior clergy of collegiate churches, though not common in {551} England. It is just _possible_, though not very probable, that this somewhat foreign word was misread, and gave rise to a blundering corruption conveying ludicrous ideas, the "turpe nomen" alluded to by the Archbishop of York tempore Ric. II. The conjectural derivation of the word from Anglo-Saxon words was not my own, but that of a subsequent correspondent. It is just one of those conjectures which, like that of "Mazarinaeus," may be quite as likely to be false as true. I could suggest twenty that would be quite as likely; such as _bier-followers_ (attenders on funerals, as did the clerks and inferior clergy in cathedrals), or _bury fellows_ (query, burying fellows), or _beer fellows_ (like the _beerers_ in Dean Aldrich's famous catch), or _belly fillers_, &c., or lastly, some corruption of _Beverly_ itself. _Barefellows_ is as likely as any. Still I cannot think that these functionaries were low or contemptible. Their position corresponded to a very honourable status in cathedral churches. JOHN JEBB. _Harmony of the Four Gospels_ (Vol. viii., pp. 316. 415.)--I am greatly obliged to MR. HARDWICK, MR. BUCKTON, and J. M. for their valuable and satisfactory replies to my Query. To the list of those Harmonies published since the Reformation, may be added that of John Hind, 1632, under the title of "The Storie of Stories, or the Life of Christ, according to the foure holy Evangelists: with a harmonie of them, and a table of their ch
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