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io; and the first page is illuminated in a good Italian style of the fifteenth century. It is very well written in the Venetian dialect, and commences thus: "Venerabilibus ac Devotissimis D[=n]e Abbatissae et Monialibus Ecclesiae Sancti Bernardini de Padua salut[=e] in D[=NO].--Ritrovandomi ne li tempi in questa mia opereta descripti, Io Gabriel Capodelista Cavalier Padoano dal su[=m]o Idio inspirato et dentro al mio cor concesso fermo proposito di vistare personalmente el Sanctissimo loco di Jerusalem," &c. This MS., which was formerly in the library of the Abbati Canonici, I purchased, with others, at Venice in 1835. If W. M. R. E. has any wish to see it, and will communicate such wish to me through the medium of the publisher of "N. & Q.," I shall be happy to gratify his curiosity. I do not know whether there is any MS. of Capodilista's Itinerary in the British Museum. W. SNEYD. "_A Letter to a Convocation Man_" (Vol vii., p. 358.).--The authorship of the tract concerning which MR. FRASER inquires, is assigned to Sir Bartholomew Shower, not by the Bodleian Catalogue only, but also by Sir Walter Scott, in his edition of the Somers' _Tracts_ (vol. ix. p. 411.), as well as by Dr. Watt, in his _Bibliotheca Britannica_. The only authorities for ascribing it to Dr. Binckes which I have been able to discover, are Dr. Edmund Calamy, in his _Life and Times_ (vol. i. p. 397.), and the Rev. Thomas Lathbury, in his _History of the Convocation of the Church of England_ (p. 283.); but neither of those authors gives the source from which his information is {416} derived: and Mr. Lathbury, who appears perfectly unaware that the tract had ever been ascribed to Sir Bartholomew Shower, a lawyer, remarks: "It is worthy of observation that the author of the _letter_ professes to be a lawyer, though such was not the case, Dr. Binckes being a clergyman." Dr. Kennett also, in his _Ecclesiastical Synods_, p. 19., referred to by Mr. Lathbury, speaking of Archbishop Wake's reply, says: "I remember one little prejudice to it, that it was wrote by a divine, whereas the argument required an able lawyer; and the very writer of the _Letter to a Convocation Man_ suggesting himself to be of that profession, there was the greater equity, there should be the like council of one side as there had been of the other."--It has occurred to me that the mistake of assigning the tract to Dr. Binckes may possibly have b
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