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is XIV. declared war against England. It is certain he was in France at the age of nineteen, and remained there some years." The family vault of the Vanbrughs is certainly in St. Stephen's Church, Walbrook, where Sir John was buried on the 30th of March, 1726. EDWARD F. RIMBAULT. _Greek Inscription on a Font_ (Vol. viii., p. 198.).---This Query has already been answered and illustrated in Vol. vii., pp. 178. 366. 417.; but the following passage may be of interest, as affording instances of the same inscription in France, and pointing out the probable source of its usage, viz. from the ancient Greek metropolitan church at Constantinople: "St. Memin est une abbaye celebre sous l'ancien nom de Micy, sur la riviere de Loire, proche d'Orleans. Il y a dans l'eglise de ce monastere un benetier de forme ronde, avec cette inscription grecque gravee sur le bord du bassin, [GREEK: NIPSON ANOMEMA MEMONAN OPSIN]. La meme chose est a Paris, au benetier de St. Etienne d'Egres, et aussi autrefois a celui de Sainte Sophie a Constantinople."--_Voyages liturgiques de France, par le Sieur Moleon_, p. 219., 8vo. 1718. It may be added (on Cole's authority, vol. XXXV. f. 19b.) that the same inscription is inscribed round a large silver basin used formerly at the master's table on festival days, in Trinity College Hall, Cambridge; and I have also seen it on a sliver-gilt rose-water basin, introduced at the banquets given by the master of Magdalene College in the same university. [mu]. "_Fierce_" (Vol. viii., p. 280.).--In this part of the country the words _pert_, pronounced "peart," and _pure_, bear the same meaning, of well in health and spirits. FRANCIS JOHN SCOTT. Tewkesbury. {353} _Giving Quarter_ (Vol. viii., p. 246.).--It must be observed that the older form of the expression is "keeping quarter:" "That every one should kill the man he caught, To _keep no quarter_."--_Drayton in Richardson._ Now very obvious application of the word _quarter_, instanced by Todd, is to signify the proper station or appointed place of any one. "They do best who, if they cannot but admit love, yet make it _keep quarter_, and sever it wholly from their serious affairs."--Bacon's _Essays_. To keep quarter, then, is to keep within measure, within the limits or bounds appointed by some paramount consideration; and hence, as in the following passage from Shakspeare (where it is
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