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s? J. P. S. Dorking. ["Shrove-tide," says Warton, "was formerly a season of extraordinary sport and feasting. There was {224} anciently a feast immediately preceding Lent, which lasted many days, called _Carniscapium_. In some cities of France an officer was annually chosen, called Le Prince d'Amoreux, who presided over the sports of the youth for six days before Ash Wednesday. Some traces of these festivities still remain in our Universities." In these degenerate days more is known, we suspect, of pancakes and fritters, than of a football match and a cock-fight:--the latter, we are happy to say, is now almost forgotten among us. As to the pancake custom, no doubt that is most religiously observed by the readers of "N. & Q.," in obedience to the rubric of the _Oxford Sausage_: "Let glad Shrove Tuesday bring the pancake thin, Or fritter rich, with apples stored within." According to Fitz-Stephen, "After dinner, all the youths go into the fields to play at the ball. The scholars of every school have their ball and bastion in their hands. The ancient and wealthy men of the city come forth on horseback to see the sport of the young men, and to take part of the pleasure, in beholding their agility." And till within the last few years: "... The humble play Of trap or football on a holiday, In Finsbury fields,"-- was sufficiently common in the neighbourhood of London and other places. See Brande's _Popular Antiquities_, vol. i. pp. 63-94. (Bohn's edition), and Hone's _Every-Day Book_, vol. i. pp. 244. 255-260.] _Vossioner; its Meaning._--In looking over a parcel of brass rubbings made some years since, I find the word _vossioner_ used, and not knowing its signification, I should be glad to be enlightened on the subject; but, in order to enable your readers to judge more correctly, I think it better to copy the whole of the epitaph in which the word occurs. The plate is in Ufton Church, near Southam, county Warwick; it measures eighteen inches in width by sixteen deep. "Here lyeth the boddyes of Richard Hoddomes, Parsson and Pattron and _Vossioner_ of the Churche and Parishe of Oufton, in the Countie of Warrike, who died one Mydsomer Daye, 1587. And Margerye his Wiffe w^{th} _her_ seven Childryn, as namelye, Richard, _John_, and _John_, Anne, Jane, Elizabeth,
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