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peech was addressed to me by a poor woman who wished me to go and see her husband. He was ordinary enough, although she had adorned his head with a _red_ night-cap; but her meaning was evidently that he was far from well; and Johnson's _Dictionary_ does not give this signification to the word. A cottage child once told me that the dog opened his mouth "a power wide." [Old English W. N.] _Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory for 1854._--In the advertisement prefixed to this valuable compilation, which, according to the _Quarterly Review_, "contains more information about Ireland than has been collected in one volume in any country," we may find the following words: "All parliamentary and official documents procurable, have been collected; and their contents, so far as they bore on the state of the country, carefully abstracted; and where any deficiencies have been observable, the want has been supplied by applications to private sources, which, in every instance, have been most satisfactorily answered. He [Mr. Thom] is also indebted to similar applications to the ruling authorities of the several religious persuasions _for the undisputed accuracy of the ecclesiastical department of the Almanac_." I wish to call attention to the latter words; and in so doing, I assure you, I feel only a most anxious desire to see some farther improvements effected by Mr. Thom. I cannot allow "the undisputed accuracy of the ecclesiastical department," inasmuch as I have detected, even on a cursory examination, very many inaccuracies which a little care would certainly have prevented. For example, in p. 451. (_Ecclesiastical Directory_, Established Church and Diocese of Dublin), there are at least five grave mistakes, and four in the following page. These pages I have taken at random. I could easily point out other pages equally inaccurate; but I have done enough I think to prove, that while I willingly accord to the enterprising publisher the full meed of praise he so well deserves, a little more attention should be paid in future to the preparation of the ecclesiastical department. ABHBA. _Antiquity of the Word "Snub."_-- "Beware we then euer of discontente, and _snubbe_ it betimes, least it overthrowe us as it hath done manie." "Such _snubs_ as these be little cloudes."--_Comfortable Notes on Genesis_, by Gervase Babington, Bishop of Exeter, 1596. J. R. P. _
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