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rhendinantis." It does not appear, in the above roll, how long the hapless queen remained in the abbey. LAMBERT B. LARKING. Ryarsh Vicarage. Dec. 14. 1849. _The Talisman of Charlemagne_.--I beg to refer your correspondent, on the subject of Charlemagne's Talisman, to what professes to be a correct representation of this antique relic, in _The Illustrated London News_, of March 8th, 1845; but it is not there described as "a small nut, in a gold filigree envelopment," and gives the idea of an ornament much too large for the finger or even wrist of any lady: that paper says,-- "This curious object of virtu is described in the Parisian journals as, 'la plus belle relique de l'Europe;' and it has, certainly, excited considerable interest in the archaeological and religious circles of the continent. The talisman is of fine gold, of round form, as our illustration shows, set with gems, and in the centre are two rough sapphires, and a portion of the Holy Cross; besides other relics brought from the Holy Land." The rest of the description much resembles your correspondent's, and asserts the talisman to be at that time the property of Prince Louis Napoleon, then a prisoner in the chateau of Ham. S.A.M. _Sayers the Caricaturist._--In Wright's _England under the House of Hanover_, vol. ii. p. 83 _n_., it is stated that James Sayer, the caricaturist, "died in the earlier part of the present century, no long time after his patron, Pitt." In _Sepulchral Reminiscences of a Market Town_, by Mr. Dawson Turner (Yarmouth, 8vo. 1848), p. 73 _n_., the caricaturist is called Sayers, and is said to have died on the 20th of April, 1823. C.H. COOPER. Cambridge, Dec. 29. 1849. _May-Day_.--To what old custom does the following passage allude? "It is likewise on the first day of this month [May] that we see the ruddy milk-maid exerting herself in a most sprightly manner under a pyramid of silver tankards, and, like the virgin Tarpeia, oppressed by the costly ornaments which her benefactors lay upon her." --_Spectator_, No. 365. MELANION. [Our correspondent will find much curious illustration of this now obsolete custom in Strutt's _Sports and Pastimes_ p. 357. (ed. Hone), where the preceding passage from the _Spectator_ is quoted; and we are told "these decorations of silver cups, tankards, &c. were borrowed for the purpose, and hung round the milk pails (
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