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book, edited by Thomas Crowley, in the next edition, entitled Cooper's _Chronicle_, "printed in the house late Thomas Berthelettes," 1560. The running title to the first and second parts is, "Lanquet's Chronicle;" and to the third, "The Epitome of Chronicles." The other editions are, "London, 1554," 4to., and "London, 1565," 4to. We should think the edition of 1560 rare: it was in the collections of Mr. Heber and Mr. Herbert. In this work the following memorable passage occurs, under the year 1542:--"One named Johannes Faustius fyrste founde the crafte of printynge in the citee of Mens in Germanie."] _"Our English Milo."_--Bishop Hall extols in his _Heaven upon Earth_ the valour of a countryman in a Spanish bull-fight (see p. 335., collected ed. _Works_, 1622). Of whom does he speak? R. C. WARDE. Kidderminster. [If we may offer a conjecture, in the passage cited the bishop seems to refer to that "greatest scourge of Spain" Sir Walter Raleigh, and not so much to a bull-fight as to the Spanish Armada. The bishop is prescribing Expectation as a remedy for Crosses, and says, "Is it not credible what a fore-resolved mind can do--can suffer? Could our English Milo, of whom Spain yet speaketh, since their last peace, have overthrown that furious beast, made now more violent through the rage of his baiting, if he had not settled himself in his station, and expected?" Sir Walter's "fore-resolved and expectant mind" was shown in the publication of his treatise, _Notes of Directions for the Defence of the Kingdom_, written three years before the Spanish invasion of 1588.] _"Delights for Ladies."_--I lately picked up a small volume entitled-- "Delights for Ladies; to adorn their Persons, Tables, Closets, and Distillatories, with Beauties, Bouquets, Perfumes, and Waters. Reade, practise, and censure." London, Robert Young. 1640. Who is the author of this interesting little work? Some one has written on the fly-leaf, "See Douce's _Illustrations of Shakspeare_, vol. i. p. 69., where there is a reference to this curious little book;" but as I cannot readily lay my hand on Douce, I will feel obliged for the information sought for from any of your valued correspondents. GEORGE LLOYD. Dublin. [The author was Sir Hugh Plat, who, says Harte, "not to mention his most excellent talents, was the most ingenious husbandma
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