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he greater solemnity. Thus, if MR. WARDEN will consult the _Ordo Recitandi Officii Divini_ for 1834, he will see that next Sunday, the 8th inst., stands "Dom inf. Oct.," _i.e._ of the Epiphany, and that the same occurs on other days during the year. May I point out an erratum in a Query inserted some time since (not yet replied to), regarding a small castle near Kingsgate, Thanet, the name of which is printed Aix Ruochim; it should be Arx Ruochim. A. O. H. Blackheath. _Death Warnings in Ancient Families_ (Vol. ix., p. 55.).--A brief notice of these occurrences, with references to works where farther details may be met with, would form a very remarkable record of events which tend to support one's belief in the truth of the remark of Hamlet: "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in our philosophy." A drummer is stated to be heard in C---- Castle, the residence of the Earl and Countess of A., "going about the house playing his drum, whenever there is a death impending in the family." This warning is asserted to have been given shortly before the decease of the Earl's first wife, and preceded the death of the next Countess about five or six months. Mrs. Crowe, in her _Night Side of Nature_, observes hereupon: "I have heard that a paper was found in her (the Countess's) desk after her death, declaring her conviction that the drum was for her." Whenever a little old woman visits a lady of the family of G. of R., at the time of her confinement, when the nurse is absent, and strokes down the clothes, the patient (says Mrs. Crowe), "never does any good, and dies." Another legend is, that a single swan is always seen on a particular lake close to the mansion of another family before a death. Then, Lord Littleton's dove is a well-known incident. And the lady above quoted speaks of many curious warnings of death by the appearance of birds, as well as of a spectral black dog, which visited a particular family in Cornwall immediately before the death of any of its members. Having made this Note of a few more cases of death warnings, I will end with a Query in the words of Mrs. Crowe, who, after detailing the black dog apparition, asks: "if this phenomenon is the origin of the French phrase _bete noire_, to express an annoyance, or an augury of evil?" JAS. J. SCOTT. Hampstead. "_The Secunde Personne of the Trinitie_" (Vol. ix., p. 56.).--I think it i
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