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LONDON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1916.

CONTENTS.-No. 36.

NOTES:-Shakespeare on Satan as an Angel of Light, 181-
Marshals of France, 182-Mansell of Muddlescomb, 184-
Capt. Cox's Book of Fortune,' 1575, 185-"Unthinkable."
186-Uncut Paper-Memorial of Cholera Victims, Bicester,
Oxon-Ancient Roman and Welsh Law, 187-Daylight
Saving, 188.

QUERIES:-The Colours of the 56th Foot: Loudon Har-
court Gordon-Sheepshanks's Biographies-Slonk Hill,
Shoreham, Sussex-Pork Butcher's Epitaph, 188-The
Removal of Memorials in Westminster Abbey-The Actor-
Martyr-Capt. Arthur Conolly-William of Malmesbury
on Bird Life in the Fens-Authors Wanted-Bardsey
Island: Conscription, 189-Bluebeard-Ladies' Spurs
Bird Folk-Lore-Mother and Child-"Toothdrawer" as a
Name-Steyning: Stening-George Harris, Civilian-
Thomas Watts, M.P.-Nicholas Wood, M.P.-J. Rennie
fires "-Sir Charles Price, Lord Mayor of London, 191.
REPLIES:-An English Army List of 1740, 191- Burton
and Speke: African Travel, 193-Folk-Lore: Chime-
Hours-Eighteenth-Century Dentists-Stones of London,
194-St. George's, Hart Street, Bloomsbury-Thomas
Congreve, M.D.-Heraldic Query: Silver Cup-Hebrew
Inscription, Sheepshed, Leicestershire-Raynes Park,
Wimbledon-Caldecott-Boy-Ed as Surname-Hare and
Lefevre Families, 195-Folk-Lore: Red Hair, 196-
Heraldic Query-Sabrina Corolla-Village Pounds-
Christopher Urswick - Panoramic Surveys of London
Streets-Mrs. Anne Dutton-The Doctrine of Signa-
tures," 197-Cromwell's Baronets and Knights-Ibbetson
or Ibberson-The London Magazine'-Postal Charges
in 1847-Rome and Moscow, 198-Ching: Cornish or
Chinese?-Emma Robinson, Author of 'Whitefriars,' 199.
NOTES ON BOOKS: 'England's First Great War
Minister Armorial Bearings of Kingston-upon-Hull'
-"Old Mother Hubbard."
Notices to Correspondents.

on the Flying Powers of Birds, 190-"Stop the Smithfield

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The use

In 'Love's Labour's Lost,' probably the first of the plays wholly written by Shakespeare, we find the allusion in a similarly direct form. Biron says (Act IV. iii. 257): "Devils soonest tempt, resembling spirits of light." made of the passage is much more elaborate in The Merchant of Venice,' and there is combined with St. Paul's simile an allusion to the temptation of Christ in the wilderness, and the quotation then made by the Tempter of a passage in the Psalms. Shylock has just quoted an incident in Scripture to justify usury, and Antonio says (Act I. iii. 98):

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The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose. Mark you this, Bassanio, An evil soul, producing holy witness, Is like a villain with a smiling cheek; A goodly apple rotten at the heart: O, what a goodly outside falsehood hath! Some have suggested the word godly' instead of goodly in this last line, and have supposed the latter repeated by mistake from the preceding line. It certainly would SATAN AS AN be more in accord with the passage in 2 Corinthians. ANGEL OF LIGHT.

Notes.

SHAKESPEARE ON

WITHOUT entering into the question as to whether Shakespeare's knowledge of the Bible was such as that which results from

66

If we now turn to the histories we find fresh illustrations of the attraction which St. Paul's words had for the dramatist. In King John,' Act III. i. 208, Constance says to the Dauphin :

There is here the same idea of a tempter and of his ability to assume attractive shapes. It is to be hoped that there are few so ungallant as to assert that " a new uptrimmed bride is not synonymous with an angel of light."

careful and prolonged study, or was merely such as a sharp-witted boy might pick up O Louis, stand fast! the devil tempts thee here from hearing it read in church, it is interest-In likeness of a new uptrimmed bride. ing to notice that one passage in 2 Corinthians was never long absent from his mind, and appears over and over again in his plays. It is the picturesque sentence in 2 Cor. xi. 14, in which St. Paul, after speaking of false apostles succeeding in passing themselves off as true, says: And no marvayle, for Satan himselfe is changed into the fashion of an Angel of light." For so ran the passage in the Geneva Version, of which there can be no doubt that the author of the plays made use.

66

In Henry V.,' Act II. ii. 114, the King reproaches Lord Scroop for his treachery hidden under the show of intimate friendship, and says that the

Devils that suggest by treasons Do botch and bungle up damnation With patches, colours, and with forms being fetched

From glistering semblances of piety.

In Richard III.,' Act I. iii. 334, we have again an allusion to the use made by the devil of Holy Scripture in the Temptation in the Wilderness, as well as to the Tempter's assuming the guise of piety. Gloucester says:

But then I sigh; and, with a piece of Scripture,
Tell them that God bids us do good for evil;
And thus I clothe my naked villainy
With old odd ends stol'n out of holy writ;
And seem a saint, when most I play the devi.
It remains for us to notice the use made
of the passage in question in the tragedies,
and we find the most striking instance in
Romeo and Juliet,' Act III. ii. 73, where
Juliet, on hearing of the death of Tybalt,
apostrophizes Romeo :-

O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face!
Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave?
Beautiful tyrant! fiend angelical!
Dove-feathered raven! wolfish-ravening lamb !
Despised substance of divinest show!
Just opposite to what thou justly seem'st,
A damned saint, an honourable villain !
O nature, what hadst thou to do in hell,
When thou didst bower the spirit of a fiend
In mortal paradise of such sweet flesh?
Was ever book containing such vile matter
So fairly bound? O, that deceit should dwell
In such a gorgeous palace!

6

In Hamlet,' Act II. ii. 627, we have St. Paul's words reproduced in a much simpler form. Hamlet resolves to test the truth of the Ghost's message, and to try to catch the conscience of the King" by the play. He says:

The spirit that I have seen
May be the devil; and the devil hath power
T'assume a pleasing shape.

Our final passage is in Othello,' Act II. iii. 354, and the words are appropriately enough from the lips of Iago, who openly acknowledges that he is acting exactly as St. Paul declares that Satan sometimes does :

:

How am I, then, a villain
To counsel Cassio to this parallel course,
Directly to his good? Divinity of hell!
When devils will the blackest sins put on,
They do suggest at first with heavenly shows,
As I do now.

It is very interesting to see the mind of the poet playing with this thought and reproducing it in so many different situations. J. WILLCOCK.

Lerwick.

MARSHALS OF FRANCE. THE last of the French marshals was Canrobert, who died in 1895. The French Government recently revived the rank, and it is expected that there will be at least one new marshal of France at the conclusion of the war.

I have been trying to put together a complete list of the marshals of France from the twelfth to the nineteenth century, with the result as given below. My list is probably very incomplete, and may contain many errors. I should be grateful for corrections and additions. The date in front of the name is the year of creation,* the dates after the name those of birth and death. The dignity of "Maréchal de France" was established in 1185, in distinction to that of "Maréchal de camp," and apparently the office was a single one till François I. raised the number of Marshals of France to two. Under Henri III. it was raised to four, and under Louis XIV. to twenty (Ency. Brit.'). 1185. Albéric-Clement, 1140-91.

1390. Boucicaut, Jean le Maingre, sire de, 13651421.

1454. Xaintrailles, Jean Poton, seigneur de, 1400– 1461.

1520. La Palice, Jacques de Chabanes, seigneur de, 1464-1525.

Coligny, Gaspard de, -1522.

1522. Montmorency, Anne, duc de, 1493–1567. 1536. La Marck, Robert de, seigneur de Fleuranges, 1491-1537.

1563.

1550. Cossé, Charles de, comte de Brissac, c. 1505– 1569. Tavannes, Gaspard Saulx, seigneur de,

1509-73.

1574. Montluc, Blaise de Lasseran - Massencome, seigneur de, 1501-77.

1574. Bellegarde, Roger de Saint Lary de, 1538– 1579.

Montmorency, François, duc de, −1579. 1577. Biron, Armand de Gontaut, baron de, 1524-77 (?).

Aumont, Jean d', 1522-95. 1579. Matignon, Jacques Goyon de, 1525-97. 1590. La Noue, François de, 1531-91. 1608. Lesdiguières, François de Bonne duc de, 1619. La Guiche, Jean François de, comte de la 1543-1627. Palice, 1567-1632.

La Force, Jacques Nompar du Caumont, duc de, 1558-1652.

Schomberg, comte Henri de, -1632.

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1639. La Meilleraye, Charles de la Porte, duc de, 1804. Berthier, Alexandre, prince de Wagram, 1602-64.

Brézé, Urbain de Maillé, marquis de.
Coligny, Gaspard de, -1646.

1641. Gramont, Antoine de, 1604-78.

1753-1815.

1804. Bessières, Jean Baptiste, duc d'Istria, 1768-1813.

1804. Brune, Guillaume Marie Anne, 1763-1815.

1642. Guébriant, Jean Baptiste Budes, comte de, 1804. Davout, Louis Nicolas, prince d'Eckmuhl,

1602-43.

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1675. Luxembourg, François Henri de Montmorency, duc de, 1632-95.

Bellefonds, Bernardin Gigault, marquis de. 1693. Boufflers, Louis François, marquis de, 1644-1711.

1693. Noailles, Anne Jules, duc de, 1650-1708. 1693. Catinat, Nicolas de, 1637-1712.

1702. Villars, Claude Louis Hector, duc de, 1653-
1734.

Tallard, Camille d'Hostun, duc de, 1652-
1728.

Marsin, Ferdinand, comte de.

1770-1823.

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1804. Pérignon, Dominique Catharine, marquis de, 1754-1818.

1804. Sérurier, Jean Mathieu Philibert, 17421819.

1809. Macdonald, Alexandre, duc de Tarente,. 1765-1840.

1809. Marmont, Auguste Louis, duc de Raguse,
1774-1852.

1809. Oudinot, Nicolas Charles, duc de Reggio,.
1767-1847.
1809. Suchet, Gabriel, duc d'Albufera, 1770-1826.
Victor, Claude Perrin, duc de Bellune,
1764-1841.

Vendôme. Louis Joseph, duc de, 1654-1712.
Villeroi, François de Neufville, duc de, 1644-1809.
1730.

Montreval, Nicolas Auguste de la Baume,
marquis de.

1703. Vauban, Sébastien le Prestre, marquis de,
1633-1707.

1703. Estrées, Victor Marie, duc d', 1660-1737. 1706. Berwick, Jacques Fitz-James, duc de, 1670-1734.

1709. Montesquiou d'Artagnan, Pierre de, 16451725.

Huxelles, Nicolas du Blé, marquis d'. 1724. Broglie, Victor Maurice, comte de, 1647

1727.

1812. Gouvion St. Cyr, Laurent, marquis de,

1764-1830.

1813. Poniatowski, Joseph Antoine, prince, 17621813.

1815. Grouchy, Emmanuel, marquis de, 17661847.

1816. Beurnonville, Pierre Riel, marquis de,
1752-1821.

1816. Clarke, Jacques Guillaume, duc de Feltre,.
1765-1818.
1816. Coigny, Henri Marie de, 1737-1816.
1816. Vioménil, comte de.

1734. Noailles, Adrien Maurice, duc de, 1678-1823. Lauriston, Jacques

1766.

1734. Broglie, François Marie, duc de, 1671-1745. 1741. Belle-Isle, Charles Louis August Fouquet,

duc de, 1684-1761.

1741. Coigny, François de Franquetot, duc de,

1670-1759.

1742. Richelieu, Louis Armand du Plessis, duc

de, 1696-1788.

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1830.
1831. Clausel, Bertrand, comte, 1772-1842.

Bourmont, Louis August Victor, comte de
Chaisne de, 1773-1846.

1744. Saxe, Maurice, comte de, 1696-1750. 1747. Lowendahl, Frédéric Woldemar, comte de, 1831. Gérard, Étienne Maurice, comte, 1773-1855.

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