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er, if their replies should indicate the authors' names, the date and place of the edition, the page, and such other distinctive marks as shall lead to a prompt investigation of the subject: among them, whether the authors quoted are in the library of the British Museum. CALMET. "_Fronte Capillata," &c._--On the Grammar School at Guilsbro, in Northamptonshire, is inscribed the following hexameter:-- "Fronte capillata post est Occasio calva." I suppose it alludes to some allegorical representation of _Occasio_; and is intended to convey the same meaning as our English proverb, "Seize time by the forelocks." From what author is this inscription taken? E.H.A. * * * * * REPLIES. "GOD SPEED THE PLOUGH." (Vol. i., p. 230.) L.S. asks, in what rebellion was the banner carried with the motto "God speed the plough?"--(_Homily against Wilful Rebellion._) Probably in the rebellion of the Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland in the north of England, during the autumn of A.D. 1569. In the passage of the homily which immediately follows the one quoted by L.S., occur these words:-- "And though some rebels bear the picture of the five wounds painted, against those who put their only hope of salvation in the wounds of Christ ... and though they do bear the image of the cross painted in a rag ... yet let no good and godly subject ... follow such standard-bearers of rebellion." Again: just _before_ the quotation cited by L.S. {9} is an allusion to the "defacing or deformation" which the rebels have made, "where through they tarry but a little while they make such reformation, that they destroy all places, and undo all men where they come." Collier, in his _Eccles. History_, vol. vi. p. 469. edit. Straker, 1840, part ii. b. vi., says,-- "However, the insurrection went on, and the rebels made their first march to Durham. And here going into the churches _they tore the English Bible_ and the _Common Prayer_. They officiated in the service of the mass, _had the five wounds of Christ represented in some of their colours_, and a chalice in others. One Richard Norton, an ancient gentleman, carried the standard _with a cross in it_." In this passage we have three out of four facts enumerated: 1st. The defacing of places; 2d. The banner with the five wounds; 3d. The standard with the cross. It does not, therefore, seem unreasonabl
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