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Thursday, June 21st, 1888
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
Abstract
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- Proceedings
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1889
References
page 173 note * In Camden's drawing of the funeral procession of Elizabeth, only some of the poor men and women carry sticks, and they are all short ones ; none of the nobles or gentry have them, other than the officials, and the same remark applies to the famous picture of the Queen's visit to Blackfriars in 1600.
Sir Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter, in the Duke of Bedford's picture by M. Gerards, has an ordinary walking-stick.
page 174 note * Vol. i. Monumenta Vetusta.
page 174 note † Cinnamon.
page 199 note * Mr. W. H. St. John Hope informs me that a full-sized representation of this sword in its original state is carved on the early seventeenth century monument of Alderman Jones, in tho cathedral church of Gloucester. It was altered in 1651–2, and again in 1660, when it was brought to its present form. The ornaments of the hilt and pommel, and the upper ornament of the scabbard, are those of the original sword ; the others aro those of 1660.