27 OCTOBER 1984, Page 46

Third Clue

3. a). The surname of three men: one called himself Cavalier Pasquil and Pierce Pennilesse; one was an eighteenth century arbiter elegantiarum who once rode naked upon a cow; and one suffered a set-back at Stanford Bridge.

b). "Tis of the mood itself I speak, what tinge Determines it, else colourless, — or mirth, Or melancholy, as from heaven or earth.

Ay, that's the variation's

c). A town that gives its name to the battle described by ‘Turrt the Monk, a Saxon, in the tenth century'; where a notorious perjurer was baptised, and slandered a schoolmaster; where Dante was married; and where an ex-prince of Holland, who 1°s this title before he gained his name, stayed in the year of his ill-fated expedition to Boulogne — after which he became a, pamphleteer on sugar-beet and pauperism at the University 0' Ham.

Answer Form 3

Ncba:1.1m. er. Address

Important: Please keep this answer form, as you will need to keep a record of all the answers that make up the trail. Without a, complete set of answers in the right order, it will be more difficult to work out the whereabouts of the treasure. If you reqUire 01°re0 space, you may write your answer on plain paper (maximum 15 words NOT ten as stated in the last two issues) and attach it to the coupon. Only send it in to the Spectator, along with all the other answer forms (even if you have not managed to complete all the answers)' at the end of the competition.. To be eligible for a prize, you must send in a complete set of answer forms.

BACK NUMBERS

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